"In every city the rich and the poor were two enemies living by the side of each other, the one coveting wealth, and the other seeing their wealth coveted. 'No relation, no service, no labor united them. The poor could acquire wealth only by despoiling the rich. The lich could defend their property only by extreme skill or by force. They regarded each other with the eyes of hate. There was a double conspiracy in every city the poor conspired from cupidity, the rich from fear. Aristotle says the rich took the following oath among themselves: "I swear always to remain the enemy of the people, and to do them all the injury in my power." It is impossible to say which of the two parties committed the most cruelties and crimes. Hati-ed effaced in their hearts every sentiment of humanity. There was at Miletus a war between the rich and the poor. At first the latter were successful, and drove the rich from the city; but afterwards, regretting that they had not been able to slaughter them, they took their children, collected them into some threshing-floors, and had them trodden to death under the feet of oxen. The rich afterwards returned to the city, and became masters of it. They took, in their turn, the children of the poor, covered them with pitch, and burnt them alive. What, then, became of the democracy? They were not precisely responsible for these excesses and crimes; still they were the first to be affected by them. There were no longer any governing rules; now, the democracy could live only under the strictest and best onserved rules. We no longer see any government, but merely factions in power. The magistrate no longer exercised his integrity for the benefit of peace and law, but for the interests and greed of a party. A command no longer had a legitimate title or a sacred character; there was no longer anything voluntary in obedience; always forced, it was always waiting for an opportunity to take its revenge."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
pp. 454-5
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Numa_Denis_Fustel_de_Coulanges
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Numa Denis Fustel de Coulanges
Numa Denis Fustel de Coulanges (18 March 1830 – 12 September 1889) was a French historian with a depth of knowledge in the ancient languages and cultures of the West.
24 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Numa Denis Fustel de Coulanges →
Related Quotes
"The sacred fire was the Providence of the family. The worship was very simple. The first rule was, that there should …"
"It is a strong proof of the antiquity of this belief, and of these practices, to find them at the same time among men…"
"The symbols of this religion became modified in the course of ages. When the people of Greece and Italy began to repr…"
"The ancient family was a religious rather than a natural association and we shall see presently that the wife was cou…"
"We should not lose sight of the excessive difficulty which, in primitive times, opposed the foundation of regular soc…"
"The causes of ... [the city's] destruction may be reduced to two. One was the change that took place in the course of…"
"The ancient city, like all human society, had ranks, distinctions, and inequalities. We know the distinction original…"
"Now, before the day on which the city was founded, the family already contained within itself this distinction of cla…"
"When the kings had been everywhere over-thrown, and the aristocracy had become supreme, the people did not content th…"
"I pour upon the earth of the tomb," says Iphigenia in Euripides, "milk, honey, and wine; for it is with these that we…"