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Solon
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SOLON
THIS philosopher was descended from a noble stock. His
father was Execestides, a man whose power was great in
Athens, though his means were small. So generous was he
in the benefits he conferred on others that he actually
ruined his own estates thereby. When this happened, his
son Solon resolved to leave home and become a merchant.
He had friends enough who would have been pleased to
assist him, but as he came of a family who were in the
habit of conferring favors, he would not consent to
receive any. Besides, Solon lived at a time when the
merchant's was considered a noble calling, on account
of its bringing different nations in contact with each
other, encouraging friendship between their kings, and
serving as a means for increasing one's experience.
Solon was always anxious to gain knowledge, and when he
grew old he used to say that "each day of his life he
learned something new." There can be no doubt of this,
for he made excellent laws, and became one of the seven
sages of Greece. His reputation for wisdom extended so
far that learned men from other parts of the world
often sought his acquaintance. Once Anacharsis, a
Scythian philosopher, who was on a visit to Athens,
knocked at Solon's door and announced that he wished to
become his friend.
"It is better to make friends at home," said Solon.
"Then you that are at home form a friendship with me,"
replied Anacharsis.
Solon was so pleased at the readiness of this answer
that he admitted the stranger and kept him in Athens
for several years.
[52] At that time Solon was engaged in writing his code of
laws, and often asked the advice of Anacharsis as he
proceeded. The Scythian laughed at him for supposing
that men could be restrained from acts of dishonesty by
written laws, which he likened to spiders' webs, that
might catch the weak and poor, but would be easily
broken by the powerful and rich. Solon's argument
against this was that men would certainly keep their
promises if nothing could be gained by breaking them,
and he meant so to frame his laws that the citizens of
Athens would find it to their advantage to observe
them. Anacharsis was nearer the truth in his judgment
of men than Solon was, as later events proved. And he
further showed his discernment when, after attending an
assembly, he said that "the wise men pleaded causes,
and the fools decided them."
Once when Solon was visiting Thales of Miletus, one of
the seven wise men of Greece, he asked Thales why he
had no family. Thales did not answer immediately, but a
few days later he introduced to Solon a stranger, who
said that he had returned from Athens ten days before.
Solon inquired what news he had brought. "None,"
replied the man, in accordance with the instructions he
had received from Thales, "but I saw the funeral of a
young man, which the whole city attended. They said he
was the son of an honorable person of high standing who
was travelling."
"What a miserable man is he!" exclaimed Solon. "But
what was his name?"
"I heard his name, but do not recollect it," said the
stranger; "all I remember is, that there was much said
about his wisdom and justice."
Solon's fears were aroused, and becoming extremely
anxious he at last mentioned his own name, and asked
the stranger in a trembling voice whether it was his
son that was dead. On hearing that such was indeed the
case, the philosopher gave way to a transport of grief.
Then Thales took his hand and said, "These things which
strike down so firm a man as Solon have kept me from
marrying and having children; but take courage, my
good friend, for not a word of what has been told to
you is true." No doubt Solon thought, as all sensible
people must think, that Thales gave proof of great
weakness; for a man ought to be reasonable enough to
arm himself against misfortune, and to remember that he
may be
[53] deprived of wealth, glory, or wisdom as well as of
objects of affection, yet he would not on that account
object to having them. It is not excess of feeling, but
lack of moral strength, that causes men to sink under
affliction.
Solon was not so successful with his writings as many
of the ancients, but his poem called Salamis is
considered very beautiful, and he wrote it under
peculiar circumstances. After the Athenians had grown
tired of the war they had carried on in vain for so
long a time with the Megarians for the island of
Salamis, they made a law condemning any one to death
who should write or speak in favor of the renewal of
hostilities. Solon was vexed at their
failure, and knew that there were thousands of young
men ready to fight if only somebody would lead them on.
So he pretended to be insane, and his own family spread
the news of his misfortune throughout the city. He then
composed his verses urging his fellow-citizens to renew
the war, and learned them by heart. Having done this,
he proceeded to the market-place, mounted the herald's
stand, and sang his composition to the crowd that
gathered to hear him. Pisistratus, his kinsman, was in
the secret, and went about urging people to obey
Solon's directions; the result was that the law was
repealed, and the war began again.
Solon himself took the command, and with five hundred
Athenian volunteers, a number of fishing-boats, and
one thirty-oared ship, anchored in the bay of Salamis.
As soon as the Megarians heard of this they began to
prepare for battle, but meanwhile sent out a ship to
ascertain whether the report they had received was
true. Solon captured the ship, secured the Megarians on
board of it, and replaced them with his own men, who
had orders to sail to the island as privately as
possible. At the head of the rest of his soldiers Solon
marched against the Megarians by land, and whilst they
were fighting those from the ship took possession of
the city. The battle was a furious one, and many were
killed on both sides, but the Athenians claimed the
victory, and dedicated a temple to Mars in honor of it.
This achievement made Solon famous throughout the land,
and his glory was heightened still more by the part he
took in the Sacred War in defence of the Delphic oracle
against the people of Cirrha. Cirrha is a town on the
Bay of Corinth. The
inhab- [54] itants, coveting the riches contained in the
Temple of Apollo, besieged the city of Delphi, where it
stood, in order to get possession of them. Solon
pronounced this an infamous deed, and persuaded the
Amphictyons, who were the representatives of the
various nations of Greece, to declare war against the
Cirrhæans. They did so, and the army laid siege to
Cirrha for a long time, but without success. At last,
becoming greatly discouraged, they consulted the
oracle. The answer was that they should not be able to
reduce the place till the waves of the Cirrhæan Sea
washed the territories of Delphi. As that seemed
impossible, the soldiers were struck with surprise; but
Solon helped them out of the dilemma by advising them
to consecrate the whole territory of Cirrha to the
Delphic Apollo, when the sea would be sure to wash the
sacred soil. Thus was the problem solved, and victory
was the result.
Now, there was a strong party in Athens opposed to the
government and anxious to have their ancient system of
laws restored. Cylon, a man of quality, and son-in-law
of the tyrant of Megara, headed this party, being
himself ambitious for power. Accordingly, he formed a
conspiracy to seize the fortress on a certain day when
many of the citizens had gone to the Olympic games.
Megacles, who was chief magistrate, immediately called
those Athenians who had remained at home to arms, and
proceeded against the conspirators. Cylon managed to
escape; but his men, finding themselves likely to be
overcome, sought refuge in Minerva's Temple. Megacles
dared not pursue them into the holy place; but he
ordered them to come forth like men. At first they
refused; but it suddenly struck them that if they
fastened a string to the shrine of the goddess and kept
hold of it, they would still be under divine
protection. So they left the temple; but as Megacles
and his men rushed upon them the string broke, and the
butchery that followed was kept up to the very altar;
for some of Cylon's men returned to the temple, and
both sides were too excited to remember that they were
on sacred soil.
The conspirators who were fortunate enough to escape
won many over to their side and kept up a constant
quarrelling with the Megacles faction. Thus two parties
were formed, and the disturbances became so serious
that Solon advised the magistrates who
[55] had polluted the Temple of Minerva to submit to a
public trial, hoping thereby to appease the indignation
of the populace and restore quiet.
The magistrates were accordingly tried, found guilty of
sacrilege, and condemned to death. Still Athens was in
a state of tumult, which the priests increased by
announcing that the sacrifices gave proof of divine
displeasure.
Solon knew that reforms were needed; but, not feeling
powerful enough to produce them alone, he entreated his
countrymen to call in the aid of Epimenides of Crete,
another of the sages of Greece, who was supposed to
have intercourse with the gods.
So Solon and Epimenides worked together, and the result
was the establishment of a more sensible form of
religious worship, as well as of funerals and mourning
ceremonies. Various barbarous customs were abolished,
and the Athenians were taught to purify themselves,
their houses, and their roads. They were encouraged to
build shrines and temples, and to live together in
harmony by dealing honestly with one another.
The good effect of the Cretan sage's visit was felt by
all, and when he returned home valuable presents were
offered to him; but he would accept nothing but a
branch of the sacred olive, which he took as a memento.
Much work still remained for Solon to do, because no
sooner were the troubles springing out of Cylon's
conspiracy settled than new ones arose among the
political parties.
The people of the mountains, those of the plains, and
those of the sea-coast represented these parties, and
each desired a separate form of government. The state
was in a dangerous condition, because the poor suffered
so severely at the hands of the rich. Bad times and
disasters had tended to increase poverty and to render
the aristocrats tyrannical. So deeply were the poor in
debt to the rich that they were compelled to pay a
sixth part of the produce of their land or to engage
their persons for the debt. In the latter case their
creditors had the power to make slaves of them or to
sell them to foreigners. Some parents were even forced
to sell their own children and fly from the country to
escape the cruelty of their oppressors.
The time came when the bravest of these poor people
resolved to bear imposition no longer. They declared
themselves ready to
[56] stand by one another, to liberate their friends, and to
alter the government. But first of all they needed a
leader; they were eager for a change, and preferred to
be ruled by one despot rather than be tyrannized over
by a great number of lords.
After a great deal of discussion, Solon was unanimously
chosen by both parties as mediator. The rich favored
him because he was nobly born and wealthy; the poor,
because he was honest. Under the title of Archon, he
was invested with full authority to frame a new set of
laws. He did not abuse his power, nor did he go to
extremes; he merely made such alterations as were just
and expedient, and afterwards, when he was asked if he
had left the Athenians the best laws that could be
given, he replied, "The best they were capable of
receiving."
First of all Solon relieved the poor by diminishing the
rate of interest; next he raised the value of their
money so that they might with greater ease pay off
their debts; then he abolished the law which enabled a
creditor to enslave his debtor, and recalled those
unfortunate creatures who had been sold into slavery
merely because they were not rich. Everybody was
dissatisfied,—the wealthy because they had not been
specially favored, and the poor because the land had
not been divided as they had hoped it would be, and all
men placed on an equality, as the Lacedæmonians had
been under the laws of Lycurgus.
However, as time rolled on, the good results of Solon's
laws began to be felt, and grumbling gradually ceased.
Indeed, such a change took place in the feelings of the
people towards the sage that they chose him to govern
their magistracies, their assemblies, their courts, and
their councils.
Draco had made statutes for the Athenians, but they
were so severe that Solon found it necessary to repeal
a great many of them, and that was the next task to
which he devoted himself. According to Draco, a man
convicted of idleness was to be punished with death,
and one who stole a cabbage or an apple was made to
suffer as severely as a villain who had committed the
most heinous crime. It was said, long after, that
Draco's laws were written not with ink but with blood.
When he was asked why he made death the punishment for
most offences, he said, "Small ones deserve death, and
I have no worse punishment for greater crimes."
[57] Solon did not agree with him, however, and preferred
milder measures. He also desired to give all the people
a share in the government, and this is how he managed
it: Those who were worth five hundred measures of fruit
he placed in the first rank of magistrates; those who
could afford to keep a horse or were worth three
hundred measures of fruit constituted the second class;
those who had two hundred measures, the third; and all
others, though not admitted to office, could go to the
assembly and act as jurors. At first this seemed a
trifling matter, but it proved to be a great privilege,
because almost every subject of dispute was brought
before the jurors. Any man who considered himself
injured might appeal to the courts, and this tended to
make the citizens resent one another's abuses. When
Solon was asked what city was best modelled, he
answered, "That where those who are not injured are no
less ready to punish the unjust than those who are."
He next re-established the court of Areopagus, which
had lost much of its power under Draco. This council
had always consisted of men noted for wealth, power,
and honesty, but Solon made it a more imposing body by
stipulating that it should consist only of those who
had borne the office of Archon, and he himself became a
member. The Archons stood so high in the public
estimation that their decrees were never questioned,
so it is easy to understand how powerful the Areopagus
must have been. But, besides, there was a council of
four hundred, selected from four different Greek
tribes, whose duty it was to consider all matters
previous to their being placed before the people, and
to take care that nothing but what had been first
examined should be brought up in the general assembly.
Thus one council acted as a check upon the other, and
neither could have absolute power.
One of the most remarkable of Solon's laws was that
which pronounced a man unfit for the privileges of
citizenship if he failed to take a decided stand when
disputes arose. For the law-giver would not permit any
one to be so absorbed in his own personal affairs as to
lose sight of the public good or fail to fight in
defence of justice.
With regard to marriages, the new laws required that an
heiress who chanced to lose her husband should marry
one of his relations, so that the money might remain
within the family. No bride
[58] was permitted to have a dowry, and her trousseau was
allowed to consist of three suits of clothes only. She
brought to her husband's home, besides, a few
inexpensive household utensils, merely to signify that
she would do her part towards providing for the family.
Solon desired marriages to be contracted out of pure
love, and not for the sake of gain; hence the laws that
governed them.
It was forbidden to speak ill of the dead, for, as they
could no longer defend themselves, it was not
considered just to do so, nor was it wise to encourage
the unkind feelings of others towards those that were
no more. One dared not speak evil of the living,
either, in public, without paying a fine; for Solon
pronounced it ill bred and a proof of great weakness
not to be able to bridle one's tongue and temper.
The laws regarding the making of wills were regulated,
as well as those that appertained to journeys, feasts,
and funerals. When we consider the reforms instituted
for mourning ceremonies, we shall see how necessary
they had become, for the women were forbidden to tear
themselves, as they had previously done, for the
purpose of exciting pity. Mourners could no longer be
hired to weep and wail at the funeral of a person for
whom they cared nothing. Only three garments might be
buried with the corpse, and the sacrifice of an ox at
the funeral was prohibited.
Women were required to dress modestly, to behave in a
quiet, decent manner, and to go out at night only in a
chariot, before which a torch was to be carried to show
that they were entitled to respect.
As Attica was rather a barren country, a husbandman's
labors scarcely rewarded him; therefore Solon turned
the attention of the citizens towards manufactures, and
no son was called upon to support his father unless he
had taught him some sort of trade. Laziness was
regarded as a crime and considered the mother of
mischief. So the council of the Areopagus inquired into
every man's means of support, and severely chastised
the idle.
Solon's laws controlled even matters that at first
sight appear trifling, such as the digging of wells,
the planting of trees, the money value of sacrifices,
and the raising of bees; but they were important, for
they influenced the welfare and comfort of the
citizens, and were not made without a great deal of
knowledge and forethought.
[59] They were written upon wooden tables, which could be
turned around in the oblong cases that contained them,
and the whole council bound themselves by oath to
observe them. Each man swore that if he should be
guilty of breaking one of them he would place a golden
statue of the same weight as himself at Delphi. This
would have been no trifling penalty, for gold was very
scarce in Greece.
It must not be supposed that all these new laws were
put into practice without considerable annoyance to the
founder of them, for such was not the case. Solon was
daily interviewed by visitors, who sought him to
condemn or to criticise certain points that happened to
affect their interest. Many praised the laws, it is
true, but so much explanation was called for, that
Solon found himself likely to incur the ill will of a
great number of people whom he could not possibly
satisfy. He therefore resolved to seek relief in
flight. So, making an excuse for a journey, he bought a
trading vessel, and obtained leave of absence for ten
years, hoping that by the expiration of that period
his code of laws would be firmly established.
He went first to Egypt, and then to Lydia, where he was
received by Crœsus, the king, by whom he had been
invited. The magnificence Solon beheld at this wealthy
court surprised him; but he did not betray this to
Crœsus, who made the most gorgeous display in honor of
his visitor, nor did he compliment and flatter the
grand monarch. He seemed rather to despise such gaudy
display, and when asked by Crœsus, "Have you ever known
a happier man than I?" he answered, boldly, "Yes,
Tellus, a fellow-citizen of mine, who died on the
battlefield, bravely fighting for his country, and left
behind him a family of good children."
Crœsus was much vexed at this reply, and considered his
visitor a very ill-bred fellow; however, he ventured
another question:
Besides Tellus, do you know another man as happy as I?"
"Yes," again returned Solon, "Cleobus and Biton, two
loving brothers and most dutiful sons, who, when the
oxen were late, harnessed themselves to the wagon and
drew their mother to the temple of Juno, amid the
blessings of all the people who beheld the act. Then,
after sacrificing and feasting, they went to rest and
never rose again, but died in the night, without sorrow
or pain, in the midst of their glory."
[60] "What!" cried Crœsus, angrily, "and do you not then
rank me among the number of happy men at all?" Not
wishing to excite his anger further, Solon replied,
"The gods, O king, have given the Greeks a moderate
proportion of everything, even of wisdom, and we have
no taste for the splendors of royalty. Moreover, the
future carries in its bosom various and uncertain
events for every man. The good fortune of to-day may
change; therefore he who is blessed with success to the
last is in our estimation the happy man. He who still
lives and has the dangers of life before him appears to
us no better than the champion before the combat is
decided." Then Solon departed, leaving the king
displeased, but no wiser than before.
Æsop, who wrote the famous fables, happened to be on a
visit to the court of Crœsus when Solon was there, and
felt very unhappy at the unkind feeling Crœsus showed
towards that sage. He therefore ventured to give a
little advice. "Solon," he said, "you should either not
converse with kings at all, or make it a rule to say
only what is agreeable to them." Whereupon Solon
replied, "No; I should either not speak to kings at
all, or say only that which ought to benefit them."
When Crœsus was defeated in his wars with Cyrus, his
city taken, and himself made prisoner and bound upon a
pile to be burned, he cried aloud in the presence of
all the Persians, "Oh, Solon, Solon, Solon!" "What god
or man is that upon whom he calls when on the eve of so
great a calamity?" asked Cyrus. "He is one of the wise
men of Greece," answered Crœsus, "for whom I sent, not
for the purpose of learning anything, but that he might
witness my glory and increase my reputation for wealth.
But the loss of what I once possessed is a misfortune
for which the pleasure it gave me did not compensate.
My miserable end must have been foreseen by that great
man, for he warned me not to rely on uncertainties, or
to call myself happy until the day of my death." Cyrus,
who was a much wiser man than Crœsus, was so impressed
by what he heard that he at once set his prisoner at
liberty and honored him with his protection as long as
he lived. Thus Solon was instrumental in saving the
life of one king while teaching a useful lesson to
another.
When Solon's leave of absence expired, he returned to
Athens.
[61] He found his laws still observed, but the citizens were
clamoring for a change of government, because there had
been quarrelling among the leaders of the Plain, the
Seaside, and the Hill parties. Now Solon was an old
man, and could no longer take so active a part in
public affairs as he had done. However, he was
distressed at the disturbances, and did all in his
power to reason with the leaders privately.
Pisistratus, who headed the Hill party, seemed the most
tractable and moderate of men to an ordinary observer,
but Solon was a good judge of human nature, and it did
not take him long to find out that Pisistratus only
pretended to yield to argument, though he was really
obstinate in his desire for absolute power. He had
gained the good will of the multitude by his smooth,
persuasive language, adroitly concealing the ambition
which prompted all his actions and speeches.
At this time Thespis began to act tragedies, which
became so popular that the people flocked in crowds to
witness them. Solon was leading a life of comparative
leisure, but, with his innate desire to learn anything
new that presented itself, he too went to see the play.
After it was over he asked Thespis whether he was not
ashamed to tell so many lies before such a number of
people. Thespis answered that since it was all in jest
there could be no harm in it. "Ay," said Solon,
striking on the ground with his staff, "that is all
very well, but if we encourage such jesting we shall
soon find it entering into our contracts."
Not long after, Pisistratus appeared at the
market-place in a chariot, with a wound on his body
that he had inflicted with his own hand. His object was
to inflame the minds of the populace against his
enemies, who, he declared, had attacked and wounded him
on account of political differences. Great indignation
was expressed on all sides, but Solon was not deceived.
He approached Pisistratus and said, "Son of
Hippocrates, you act Homer's Ulysses but indifferently,
for he wounded himself to deceive his enemies, but you
have done it to impose upon your countrymen."
In spite of this, the rabble were ready to fight for
Pisistratus, who was immediately supplied with a guard
consisting of fifty clubmen. Solon was very much
opposed to this, but, finding that he could not alter
the determination of the citizens, he retired,
[62] declaring that he was wiser than those who did not see
through the design of Pisistratus, and stronger than
those who did understand it, but were afraid to oppose
the tyranny. Solon was right; for, not satisfied with
fifty clubmen, Pisistratus increased the number until
he could control a powerful body, and then took
possession of the Acropolis. Great consternation was
the result, and Megacles, who headed the Seaside party,
fled with his whole family.
Then Solon appeared once more in the market-place, and
pointed out to the populace how misfortune had
overtaken them because they had not acted with proper
decision and spirit. They listened attentively, for
they knew that he was right. After making a lengthy
speech, he concluded by urging them to stand up like
men for their liberty, and not tamely submit to a
tyrant. Still they were afraid to act, and Solon was
too aged a man to take the lead; he therefore returned
to his own home, and placing his weapons at the
street-door, wrote over them, "I have done all in my
power to defend my country and its laws."
His friends begged him to leave Athens, but he refused
to do so, and wrote poems in which he thus reproached
his countrymen:
|
"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 as he commands."
|
People assured Solon that the tyrant would certainly
put him to death for daring to express himself so
plainly, and asked him to what he trusted for
protection. "To my old age," he replied.
Instead of condemning Solon, however, Pisistratus had
no sooner established himself firmly in power than he
sent for the law-giver, treated him with the greatest
consideration and respect, and asked him to become his
adviser. Not only did Pisistratus do this, but all his
actions were guided by the laws which Solon had made,
and he obliged his friends to observe them also.
It is said that Solon lived only a couple of years
after Pisistratus usurped the government, and that when
he died his ashes were strewn over the island of
Salamis, as he had ordered; but neither of these
statements is to be received as positive fact, though
some very reliable authors vouch for the latter one.
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