Read The Republic and The Laws (Oxford World's Classics) Online
Authors: Cicero
1. [Loeb, section 4] Nevertheless, as a good landowner needs some experience in farming, building, and book-keeping … (Nonius 3. 798).
2. [Loeb, section 9] That virtue is called bravery which contains greatheartedness and a lofty contempt of pain and death (Nonius 1. 297).
So you are waiting to hear about the ruler’s prudence in all its facets—a quality that takes its very name from ‘pro-vision’ | 1 |
Accordingly this citizen must make sure that he is always forearmed against the things that upset the stability of the state (Nonius 2. 389). | |
… and such dissension among citizens is called ‘sedition’, because people ‘go apart’ | |
… and in times of civil conflict, when soundness is more important than numbers, I think citizens should be assessed rather than counted (Nonius 3. 836). | |
For our lusts are set over our thoughts like cruel mistresses, ordering and compelling us to do outlandish things. As there is no way in which they may be appeased or satisfied, once they have inflamed a person with their seductive charms they drive him to every sort of crime (Nonius 3. 686). | |
… whoever crushes its | |
This act was the more remarkable in that, although the two colleagues were in the same position, they were not equally disliked; more than that, the affection felt for Gracchus | 2 |
The result was that, as this writer | |
In their case, as you recall, a crowd of the least substantial citizens got together, and thanks to the coins which they contributed a funeral was, quite unexpectedly, provided (Nonius 3. 833). | |
… for our ancestors were keen that marriages should be built on solid foundations (Nonius 3. 824, Priscian, | |
Laelius’ speech, | |
[Laelius complained that no statues had been erected to Nasica for killing Tiberius Gracchus. Part of Scipio’s reply has been preserved in the following section, which leads up to the Dream of Scipio.] | |
SCIPIO | 8 |
LAELIUS | |
SCIPIO | |
[Cicero began by referring to Plato’s myth of Er. | |
… who, after being laid on the funeral pyre, came back to life and revealed many secrets about the world below (Favonius Eulogius | 3 |
[Augustine says that, according to Cicero, Plato was presenting an entertaining story rather than the truth, | |
SCIPIO: AS | 9 |
Later, after he had entertained me in royal style, we continued our talk far into the night. The old man spoke all the time about Africanus, recalling not only his acts but also his sayings. Then, after going to bed, I sank into a deeper sleep than usual, for I was tired after my journey and had stayed up late. Now it happens from time to time that our thoughts and conversations give rise to something in our sleep, like what Ennius | 10 |
‘Do you see that city which, through my efforts, was forced to bend the knee to the Roman people—the city which is now reviving the wars of the past and cannot remain at peace?’ | 11 |
‘Then, Africanus, you will have to show our fatherland the light of your spirit, ability, and good sense. But at that point I see a fork, as it were, in the pathway of destiny. For when your life has completed eight times seven revolutions | 12 |
At this point Laelius cried out in horror, and the others groaned heavily. But Scipio with a gentle smile said: Sh! Please don’t wake me from my sleep. Listen for a few minutes to the rest of what happened. | |
‘Yet, to make you all the keener to defend the state, Africanus, I want you to know this: for everyone who has saved and served his country and helped it to grow, a sure place is set aside in heaven where he may enjoy a life of eternal bliss. To that supreme god who rules the universe nothing (or at least nothing that happens on earth) is more welcome than those companies and communities of people linked together by justice that are called states. Their rulers and saviours set out from this place, | 13 |
At this point I was extremely apprehensive, fearing not so much death as treachery on the part of my relatives. Nevertheless, I asked whether he himself and my father Paulus were still alive, and the others whom I imagined to be dead. | 14 |
‘Why indeed they are,’ he said, ‘and so are all who have escaped from the fetters of the body as though from prison. For that life of yours (as it is called) is really death. But look, here is your father Paulus coming to meet you.’ When I saw him, I burst into tears. But he put his arms around me, kissed me, and told me to stop crying. | |
As soon as T had dried my tears and was able to speak, I said ‘Best and most revered of fathers, please tell me—since this is life (as Africanus has just said), why do I linger on earth? Why do I not hurry here to join you?’ ‘Things are not like that,’ he said. ‘There is no possible way for you to come here, unless the god whose temple is this whole visible universe releases you from the bonds of the body. Human beings were born on condition that they should look after that sphere called earth which you see in the middle of this celestial space. A soul was given to them out of those eternal fires which you call stars and planets. Those bodies are round and spherical, animated by divine minds, and they complete their circuits and orbits with amazing speed. That is why you, Publius, and all loyal men must keep the soul in the custody | 15 16 |
When I beheld the whole universe from that point, everything seemed glorious and wonderful. There were stars which we have never seen from this earth of ours, each of a size which we have never imagined to exist. The smallest star, | |
As I gazed more intently upon it, Africanus said ‘Well now, how long will your thoughts remain fixed on the earth? Do you not notice what lofty regions you have entered? Everything is joined together by nine circles | 17 |
I gazed at all these things in amazement. Then, pulling myself together, I said ‘What is this sound, | 18 |
‘That,’ he said, ‘is the sound produced by the impetus and momentum of the spheres themselves. It is made up of intervals which, though unequal, are determined systematically by fixed proportions. The blend of high and low notes produces an even flow of various harmonies. Such vast motions cannot sweep on in silence, and nature ordains that low notes should be emitted by one of the boundaries and high notes by the other. From the uppermost of the heavenly orbits (that which carries the stars) comes a high note with frequent vibrations, in that its cycle is more rapid. The deepest note emanates from the lowest orbit, that of the moon. The earth, which is the ninth sphere, remains fixed and immobile in one place, filling the central position of the universe. Those eight rotating spheres (of which two | 19 |
Though listening to all this with astonishment, I kept turning my eyes repeatedly back to earth. Thereupon Africanus said ‘I notice you are still gazing at the home and habitation of men. If | 20 |
‘You notice, too, that the earth is also encircled and surrounded by things like belts. | 21 22 |
‘Even if the children of future generations should want to hand on in their turn the praises of each one of us which they have heard from their fathers, nevertheless, owing to the floods and fires which at certain times will inevitably afflict the earth, we cannot achieve, I will not say eternal, but even long-lasting glory. And what difference does it make that you should be talked of | 23 |
‘Anyhow, of those who may come to hear our name none will manage to remember it for more than a year. Granted, men commonly measure the year simply by the return of one heavenly body, namely the sun. But when all the heavenly bodies return to the position from which they started, and after a long interval restore the configuration of the entire firmament, then that can truly be called the cycle of a year. | 24 |