"
Against Callicles in a claim for damages KGKKi'EMG
caused by cutting off an alleged water-
.
Against Callicles in a claim for damages KGKKi'EMG
caused by cutting off an alleged water-
.
Demosthenese - First Philippic and the Olynthiacs
org/access_use#pd-google
? PREFA CE xi
national force in case of invasion (18th Oct. 1796;
Pitt's Parliamentary Speeches ii 195); on the general
defence bill (2nd June 1801 ; iii 301 f); and on the
volunteer regulation bill (27th Feb. 1804 ; iii 307 f).
Even in recent times the orator's description of the
weakness, and his expectation of the impending fall,
of a dominion 'founded' (like that of Macedonia)
' on oppression and falsehood and perjury ' (OZ. 2 ? 9)
--language which may possibly have been partially
justified by the facts, but was certainly not con-
firmed by subsequent events--finds its closest verbal
parallel in the repeated criticisms of English states- ,
men on the 'crumbling fabric' of the Turkish
Empire. Lastly, as recently as 28th October 1896,
at the opening of a Unionist club at Gateshead, the
Marquis of Londonderry, in speaking of the ' necessity
of political education,' concluded by commending,
as a text upon which Unionists might appeal to the
people, the words of Demosthenes, 'In God's name,
I beg of you to think' (Thde Philippa; ? 43 Myl-
{ean 81" 1. 7069 666v).
CAMBRIDGE,
)llarch 1 897
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? ---q_--|----I-----I~I---=--
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? CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION erE
I Life of Demosthenes from 384 to 351 B. C. xv--xxvii
II illacedonia before the reign of Philip . xxvii--xxxiv
III The reign of Philip, down to 351 13. 0. . xxxiv--xlv
IV The First Philipptc of Demosthenes . xlv-lii
V The Olyn/thiacs of Demosthenes . . lii--lxiii
VI The order of the Olynthiaes . . . lxiii--lxvii
VII The close of the Olynthian war . . lxvii--lxix
VIII 0n the evidence for the Tent . . . lxix--lxxiv
IX Select List of Editions, Dissertations, and
Books of Reference . . . . lxxiv-lxxviii
X List of the principal abbreviations used
in the Notes . . . . . lxxx
GREEK TEXT wrrn CRITICAL NOTES . . . 1--69
EXPLANATORY NOTES . . . . . . 71-224
GREEK INDEX . . . . . . . 225-239
ENGLISH INDEX . . . . . . . 241-246
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? INTRODUCTION
I Life of Demosthenes from 384 to 351 13. 0.
DEMOSTHENES was born in the year 384 8. 6. His
father, who bore the same name, was a man of con-
siderable wealth, which was invested Demosthenes,
in a cutlery and upholstery business. "113843"
The future orator was in the eighth year of his
age when he lost his father (376) and thus fell
under the care of guardians who for ten years
(37 6--366) mismanaged the estate. His bodily frame
was weak, his health delicate, and his physical
training imperfect; but, even in his youth, he
aspired to become a public speaker. His young
ambition was first fired by a famous speech delivered
in open court by the orator Callistratus on the
affair of Oropus. Hearing some of his instructors
arranging to be present, he persuaded one of them
to take him, and was provided with a place where
he might sit unseen, and hear all that was said.
He was struck by the enthusiastic congratulations
which the orator afterwards received on the success
of his cause, and still more by the powerful effect
of an eloquence which seemed capable of carrying
everything before it. Casting aside all other kinds
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? xvi LIFE OF DEMOSTHENES FROM 384 T0 861 13. 0.
of learning, he concentrated all his endeavours on
training himself as a speaker (Plutarch Dem. c. 5).
On completing his eighteenth year he came of
age (366), and prepared to seek redress for the
wrongs he had suffered at the hands of his guardians.
For this purpose he secured the aid of Isaeus, the
ablest man of his time as an authority on the law
- of inheritance, and the influence of that expert may
be traced in the speeches Against Aphobus, delivered
, by Demosthenes in suing his guardians
misfigfiw in 363 (07-. 27, 28, etc. ) Although
successful in his suit, all that he had
practically gained was a wider reputation and a
higher degree of confidence in public speaking.
He had happily tasted something of the fame
which could be won by success in forensic pleading,
and he now began to 100k forward to playing a
part as a political speaker. But, on the first
occasion on which he addressed the Assembly,
he was received with derision. His timid bearing,
his involved style, together with the weakness of
his voice, the shortness of his breath, and the in-
distinctness of his articulation, had made it difficult
for his audience to understand him. He left the
place of assembly and went down to the Peiraeus,
where he was wandering about disconsolately, when
an old man, who in his boyhood had listened to
Pericles, came up to him and assured him that his
style was really Periclean ; at the same time he
upbraided him for his faintheartedness in not facing
his audience boldly, and for his neglect of his general
health and his bodily powers (Plut. Dem. c. 6).
Demosthenes himself, in his old age, told a younger
orator, Demetrius of Phalerum, how he had mastered
the defects of an indistinct pronunciation by
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? SPEECHES AGAINST APHOBUS, ETC. xvii
reciting long passages with pebbles in his mouth,
and how he had trained his voice by declaiming
when he was out of breath, either with running, or
with walking up a steep ascent (c. 11). On another
occasion, in his early days, when he had failed to
win the ear of the Assembly, and was going home
disconcerted, he was met by the actor Satyrus who
drew his attention to the weak points in his delivery,
and made him see by his own rehearsal the vast
importance of action. In complete seclusion he
daily devoted himself to the improvement of his
delivery (c. 7). He also gave himself constant
practice in writing down, rearranging and repeating
arguments suggested in conversation with others,
changing and modifying the form of expression in
every possible way. This laborious method gave
rise to an impression that he had no great natural
aptitude for speaking, and there is no doubt as to
his general reluctance to speak without due pre-
meditation (0. 8), although, on the few occasions when
he broke this rule, he did so with the most brilliant
success. His usual reserve, and his indifference to
any distinction that might be attained by these
sudden outbursts of unpremeditated speech, were,
no less than his style and delivery, inspired by a
desire to follow in the footsteps of Pericles (c. 9).
His own delivery was much admired in the popular
Assembly, though cultivated people, like Demetrius,
considered it inelegant and unmanly, while one of
his own contemporaries contrasted his artificial
manner and his forced pathos with the reserve and
the self-possession of older speakers who discoursed
with the multitude in a stately and magnificent
way; admitting, however, that his speeches, when
read, appeared far superior to those of others in
b
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? xviii SPEECH ON THE TRIERARC'HIO' GROWN
point of construction and in force (0. 11 ? ? 3, 4).
While Pericles was the orator's great exemplar, he
also owed much to the historical associations by
which he was surrounded. To the future statesman
the monuments of art that crowned the Acropolis
were eloquent memorials of the greatness of Athens
in the Periclean age. He was also much indebted
to the literature of his country. With the published
masterpieces of Isocrates he was undoubtedly familiar,
and their influence may be traced in some of the
smoother and more flowing portions of the Philippics. 1
To Thucydides his debt was still deeper, as may be
seen not only in the matter of some of his speeches,
but also in the style of all. He resembles Thucydides
in his brevity, conciseness and energy, in his
occasional harshness and roughness, and his power of
arousing the emotions, though he is certainly no
slavish follower of the historian's manner, nor does
he emulate his archaic and unfamiliar diction, or his
anacoluthic constructions, or his far too frequent
obscurity. 2
Next to the speeches against his guardians, the
earliest extant speech delivered by the orator himself
mp1 1. 0;, appears to be that On the Trierarchic
1222121395 Crown (Or. 51). In 359 B. C. Demo-
- 359 no sthenes went to the Hellespont as trier-
arch under Cephisodotus, and it was probably in the
same year that he delivered this speech. He here
claims the crown promised to the trierarch who was
the first to have his ship ready for sea. It is the
1 OZ. 3 ? ? ~23--9. Blass Attischc Beredsamlceit In i 892 notices
the Isocratean use of the Plural of abstract words, such as
repiouaia. and eziropla in Dem. 3 ? 33, 5 ? 8.
2 Dionysius Hal. Time. 53, 55. Blass Le. 87 f2. Cp. Introd.
to Cicero's Orato'r pp. xxiv--xxix.
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? AGAINST SPUDIAS, C'ALLIOLES, CONON xix
only extant speech delivered by Demosthenes before
the Council of the Five Hundred. 1
Before embarking on his public career, he devoted
much of his time to the not unprofitable profession
of a Ao-yoypdqtos, or writer of speeches to be delivered
by litigants on either side in the law-courts of
Athens. The earliest place among these 'Private
Speeches' has been assigned, on grounds of style, to
the speech Against Spudias on a ques-
tion of dowry (Or. 41) and to that ? 11522?
"
Against Callicles in a claim for damages KGKKi'EMG
caused by cutting off an alleged water-
. s-
course (Or. 55). The speech Against
Conon in a case of assault and battery is sometimes
ascribed to this period (Or. 54). 2
A second period of the orator's career opens
with the close of the Social War in 355. At the
beginning of this period stands the KM-'Avspm
speech Against Androtion (Or. 22), TWWS 355 "-
written for one Diodorus, attacking as illegal Andro-
tion's proposal to confer a golden crown on the out-
going Council in spite of the fact that in its year of
office it had added no new ships to the navy. The
importance to Athens of an effective navy is here
emphasised by an appeal to the experience of the
past; and, although large portions of the speech
are solely concerned with points of law, the closing
passage 67--7 8) has the same lofty tone that is
attained in the great deliberative speeches of subse-
quent years. In particular, the fine allusion to
"the former achievements' of Athens, and to 'the
splendour of the sacred edifices raised to commemorate
1 Blass m i 2422 f. _
2 ASchaefer Dem. and swim Zeit iii B 251. Clinton sug-
gests 341 no. Op. Select Private Oratiorts ii3 pp. lxiii, 242.
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? xx AGAINST ANDROTION, AGAINST LEPTJNES
them, yonder Propylaea, the Parthenon, the porticos
and arsenals ' (22 ? 76) is repeated three years later
in the speech Against Aristocrates (23 207), and
finds an echo six years later in the Third Olgnthiae :--
The public works (of our forefathers) are edifices and
ornaments of such beauty and grandeur, in temples and
in dedicated offerings, that posterity has no power to
surpass them (3 ? 25).
To the followmg year, 354, belongs the first
speech delivered by Demosthenes himself in a forensic
Mb; Ayn-TL cause of public interest, the speech
"I" 354 "- Against the Law of Leptines (Or. 20).
The law in question abolished the hereditary privi-
leges bestowed on public benefactors and made it illegal
to grant such privileges for the future. Demosthenes
attacks this law as unconstitutional, inexpedient, and
dishonourable, as involving a breach of public faith
and a slur on the good name of Athens. The tone
of the speech, delivered (it will be remembered) by
the orator himself, as contrasted with the scathing
invective directed against the life of Androtion in a
speech written for another, is marked by a studious
moderation, and even by courtesy towards the orator's
opponents. He here appears as 'a sound constitu-
tional lawyer, or rather a sagacious politician, warning
his countrymen against the dangers of an unwise
measure of legislation. ' 1 He dwells in glowing
terms on the exploits of the Athenian commanders,
Conon 68--74) and Chabrias 75-86) ; and he
refers, for the first time, to Philip of Macedon, to his
capture of Pydna (in 357) and Poteidaea (in 356), and
1 CRKennedy Dem. against Leptines etc. p. 235. Cp. Introd.
to Leptines p. xxxviii.
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? ON THE S Y MM ORIES xxi
to the bounties which were the source of his influence
over his adherents 61, 63).
To the latter part of the same year belongs the
first deliberative, or parliamentary, speech of Demo-
sthenes that has come down to us,-- mp, my
the speech 0n the Symmories, which erup- OpLGW
is also the first of his three Hellenic B'c'
orations (Or. 14). The debate is on war with Persia,
and the orator seizes the opportunity to lay down some
leading principles of foreign policy and to propose a
measure for the reform of the navy. The proposal is
connected with the recent application to the trier-
archy of the system of 'symmories' already applied
to the war-tax. 1 It aims at ensuring greater prompti-
tude in naval preparations by means of a better
organisation, by breaking up the larger boards into
smaller groups, and by assigning to each group a
corresponding portion of the fleet and its proper
share of the funds. 2 The reform is introduced in
terms that form a forecast of the tone of the
Philtmaies.
The first and foremost point in our preparations is
for every citizen to be willing and eager to do his duty.
Whenever you have all had a common wish and every
man has thereupon deemed that its accomplishment
depended on himself, nothing has ever escaped you. On
the other hand, whenever you have wished only, and
then looked at one another, each expecting to be idle,
while his neighbour did the work, nothing has ever come
to pass (14 15).
Though actual foes of Athens in Greece, as
contrasted with contingent enemies such as Persia,
1 See note on 2 ? 29 l. 270.
2 14 ? ? 16--23 ; Butcher's Demosthenes pp. 37 f.
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? xxii A GA INS T TIM OGRA TES
are vaguely indicated, there is no real reference to
Philip 11). For the present, the orator seems
hardly conscious of the distant cloud that is destined
ere long to darken the Hellenic horizon.
In the following year the client for whom
Demosthenes had composed the speech Against
mm Androtion, secured his services for a
TLpoxpd'rovg similar speech Against Timocrates.
353 B'c' Androtion had been acquitted, but he
had since been required to refund certain public
moneys which he had embezzled, and, in default, he
was liable to imprisonment as a debtor to the State.
In the interest of Androtion and others in the same
position, Timocrates proposed and carrieda measure for
extending the period during which payment of public
debts might be made, and for this measure he was
indicted by Diodorus. Large portions of the speech
are almost identical with that Against Androtion,
many of the arguments are merely verbal and
technical, some of them even captions and sophistical.
A higher level, however, is reached in the appeal to
the public interests which would be imperilled if the
State were prevented from enforcing payment of its
dues.
Even without such a law as this, we might congratulate
ourselves if we could meet the sudden emergencies of war ;
but, with it, supposing you should be summoned to arms
in your own defence, do you suppose that the enemy will
await the dilatory subterfuges of miscreants at home?
(? ? 94--5). The defendant has deluded you into passing
a law which not merely opens but actually destroys our
prison-house, and makes our courts of justice useless (? 209).
It is the laws that are the morals of the State (? 210).
It is the laws that preserve and consolidate all our
advantages 216).
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? FOR THE MEGALOPOLITANS xxiii
To the same year belongs the second of the three
Hellenic orations. The new city of Megalopolis had
been created by Epaminondas by a union of the
scattered villages of the Arcadian league, and at this
moment the pressure of the Phocian war (355--346
B. C. ) prevented Thebes from being able to protect it.
Sparta seized the opportunity to propose a general
restoration of ancient rights, the restitution of Oropus
to Athens, and of Messene to Sparta, and the
dissolution of Megalopolis. Being thus threatened
by Sparta, and unable to obtain help from Thebes,
Megalopolis sent for aid to Athens. In the speech
For the Megalopolitans (Or. 16) Demo- {ma Me a_
sthenes in the main supported their Ao-rgohvrve? v
plea, insisting on the maintenance of the 3 B'c'
balance of power between Thebes and Sparta, point-
ing to his country's traditional policy of protecting the
oppressed, and urging finally that it would be a grave
mistake to drive the Arcadians to seek help else-
where. We have no direct information as to the
vote taken at the close of the debate ; but we know
that war ensued between Sparta and Megalopolis, and
that Athens remained neutral. We know above all
that, when the Arcadians were once more in distress,
taught perhaps by their present experience, they
applied for aid (and not in vain)--not to Athens but
to the king of Macedon.
It may here be convenient to mention the third
of the Hellenic orations, that On the Liberty of the
Rhodians (Or. 15). It resembles the m 1 . r s
speech For the Megalopolitans in so far as iazfigzve? sg'
1t 1s a reply to an appeal for aid against 351 1w-
oppression ; it resembles that On the Symmories in its
attitude towards the power of Persia. The death of
Maussolus, prince of Caria, and the succession of
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? xxiv ON THE LIBERTY OF THE RHODIANS
Artemisia prompted the democrats who had been
exiled from Rhodes to ask Athens to release them
from subjection to Caria. Rhodes had revolted
from Athens in the Social \Var (357--355 B. C. );
but Demosthenes urged his audience to forgive and
forget the past, and generously to aid the cause of
democracy against oligarchy, of freedom against
oppression. He denounces as deserters those of
the politicians of Athens who form the oligarchical
faction 33), while, with regard to foreign foes,
he says of the king of Persia and the king of
Macedonia:
There are some, I observe, who often despise Philip,
as a person of no account, while they dread the king of
Persia as a powerful enemy to any that he chooses.
Well, if we are to refrain from resisting the former
because he is contemptible, while we yield everything to
the latter because he is formidable, against whom are we
to take the field, 0 Athenians? (15 ? 24).
The date of the speech is uncertain. If, with
Diodorus (xvi 36), we place the death of Maussolus
in 353 B. C. , it falls in the same year as the Megalo-
politan speech and two years before the First Philippic
(351 13. 0. ) If, with Pliny (xxxvi 30, 47), we place
the death in 351 and follow Dionysius in assigning
the speech to 351--50, it falls a few months later
than the First Philippic. The tone of the reference
to Philip in the speech For the Rhodians is different
from that of the first speech against Philip; and, if
the later date is accepted, we are forced to assume
that the impression produced by the First Philippic
had already passed away, and that Philip's temporary
inaction had relieved Athens from any immediate
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? AGAINST ARISTOC'RA TES xxv
apprehension. 1 The speech For the ledians had prob
ably no immediate, certainly no permanent result:
a few years later (346 13. 0. ) Rhodes was still under
the power of the successor of Artemisia (5 25).
As a forensic speech of the same period as those
against Androtion and Timocrates we have the
speech Against Aristocrates (Or. 23). "UNA"
It is written for the opponent of a siren d'rovg
proposal carried in the Council declaring 35 "'c'
the person of Charidemus to be inviolable and any
one who killed him to be an outlaw from the dominions
of Athens and her allies. Charidemus was a com-
mander of mercenaries now in the service of the
Thracian chieftain Cersobleptes, and the privileges
proposed on his behalf were inspired by the hope
of his aiding Athens to recover Amphipolis. The
speech composed by Demosthenes denounces the
proposal as illegal and inexpedient, and Charidemus
as an unprincipled adventurer who was undeserving
of such a distinction (see note on 3 5). Towards
the close, it dwells on the honours cautiously con-
ferred by Athens on her benefactors in the past, and
compares them with those so lavishly granted by her
in recent times. The contrast between the splendour
of the mansions now occupied by leading statesmen
with the pcttiness and paltriness of the public build-
ings of the day (23 206--8) is repeated at a
future time in the Third Olgnthiae (3 25--9).
Again, it is in this speech that, towards the close of
a warning against faithless friendships, we find the
first public avowal of Philip as the acknowledged
enemy Of Athens :--6 ,uaiMo-"ra. viiv fipiv e? XngS ci'wu
1 351--50 13. 0. is the date preferred by ASchaefer i 4872, and
Blass m i 3052. Reasons in favour of 353 are urged in Butcher's
Dem. pp. 43 f.
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? xxvi PHILIP THE ENEMY OF ATHENS
doxdw 'I'L'Aunros oirroo't (23 121). \Vhat Philip
had done for Olynthus and the return he had received
are here described. Philip had delivered Poteidaea
to the Olynthians ' after he had expended large sums
in the war with you, when he had taken and might
have held it himself ,- yet the Olynthians trust him
so little now, that they have made friends of you,
who they know would most gladly kill both Philip's
friends and Philip himself, and they promise to make
you their allies also' 107--9). Philip is afterwards
pointed out as an obvious example of reckless ambition.
I need not ask, men of Athens, if you know of that
Macedonian, Philip. Though it was more desirable for
him to receive the revenues of all Macedonia in peace
than those of Amphipolis with peril, and to be connected
with yourselves as his hereditary allies than with the
faithless Thessalians, he has chosen to make small profits
and to have treacherous friends and to incur danger in
preference to living in security. Prosperity and prudence
do not go together: many, by aiming at greater things,
often lose what they have already (? ? 111--3).
The speech Against Aristocrates failed in its
immediate purpose. In the following year Chari-
demus was still in the service of Athens; for, in
the autumn of 351 B. C. , he was sent on a mission
to the Thracian Chersonesus. Philip had invaded
Thrace twelve months before, and the rival princes,
Amadocus and Cersobleptes, had submitted to his
control. 1 Henceforth, it was no longer against
petty Thracian princes that Athens had to protect
the Chersonesus, but against the ever growing and
increasing might of Macedonia.
Having briefly traced the career of Demosthenes
1 ASchaefer i 446 f2.
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? MACEDONIA BEFORE THE REIGN OF PHILIP xxvii
down to the time when he first appeared as the
opponent of Philip in the First Philippic, we now
turn to a retrospective view of the rise and progress
of the Macedonian power.
II Macedonia. before the reign of Philip
The name of Macedonia was originally confined
to the inland district between the rivers Lydias
and Haliacmon ; but, even before the Geography of
accession of Philip, Macedonia had mamma-
gradually extended itself, until its limit to the south
was Thessaly, to the north Paeonia, to the west
Illyria and the northern continuation of the range of
Pindus, while to the east it successively reached the
Axius and the Strymon. The mountain-ranges
stretching eastward from Pindus divide the country
into a series of deep valleys encircled by lofty
heights and admitting of very slight communication
with one another. These successive valleys are
known as the districts of Orestis and Elimia, both
traversed by the Haliacmon ; that of the Eordaei near
the source of the Lydias ; that of Lyncestis near the
rise of the Erigon ; and lastly the valley of the Axius
which receives the Erigon in the earlier part of its
course, and, after flowing through the vast upland
plain of Pelagonia, bursts through a ravine now
known as the Iron Gate, and ultimately falls into
the bay of Therma, near the outlet of the united
streams of the Lydias and Haliacmon. While
Macedonia in itself is thus pre-eminently a highland
region remote from the sea, and difficult of access
owing to its mountain-ranges, the inaccessibility
caused by its mountains is in part corrected by its
rivers.
? PREFA CE xi
national force in case of invasion (18th Oct. 1796;
Pitt's Parliamentary Speeches ii 195); on the general
defence bill (2nd June 1801 ; iii 301 f); and on the
volunteer regulation bill (27th Feb. 1804 ; iii 307 f).
Even in recent times the orator's description of the
weakness, and his expectation of the impending fall,
of a dominion 'founded' (like that of Macedonia)
' on oppression and falsehood and perjury ' (OZ. 2 ? 9)
--language which may possibly have been partially
justified by the facts, but was certainly not con-
firmed by subsequent events--finds its closest verbal
parallel in the repeated criticisms of English states- ,
men on the 'crumbling fabric' of the Turkish
Empire. Lastly, as recently as 28th October 1896,
at the opening of a Unionist club at Gateshead, the
Marquis of Londonderry, in speaking of the ' necessity
of political education,' concluded by commending,
as a text upon which Unionists might appeal to the
people, the words of Demosthenes, 'In God's name,
I beg of you to think' (Thde Philippa; ? 43 Myl-
{ean 81" 1. 7069 666v).
CAMBRIDGE,
)llarch 1 897
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? ---q_--|----I-----I~I---=--
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? CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION erE
I Life of Demosthenes from 384 to 351 B. C. xv--xxvii
II illacedonia before the reign of Philip . xxvii--xxxiv
III The reign of Philip, down to 351 13. 0. . xxxiv--xlv
IV The First Philipptc of Demosthenes . xlv-lii
V The Olyn/thiacs of Demosthenes . . lii--lxiii
VI The order of the Olynthiaes . . . lxiii--lxvii
VII The close of the Olynthian war . . lxvii--lxix
VIII 0n the evidence for the Tent . . . lxix--lxxiv
IX Select List of Editions, Dissertations, and
Books of Reference . . . . lxxiv-lxxviii
X List of the principal abbreviations used
in the Notes . . . . . lxxx
GREEK TEXT wrrn CRITICAL NOTES . . . 1--69
EXPLANATORY NOTES . . . . . . 71-224
GREEK INDEX . . . . . . . 225-239
ENGLISH INDEX . . . . . . . 241-246
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? INTRODUCTION
I Life of Demosthenes from 384 to 351 13. 0.
DEMOSTHENES was born in the year 384 8. 6. His
father, who bore the same name, was a man of con-
siderable wealth, which was invested Demosthenes,
in a cutlery and upholstery business. "113843"
The future orator was in the eighth year of his
age when he lost his father (376) and thus fell
under the care of guardians who for ten years
(37 6--366) mismanaged the estate. His bodily frame
was weak, his health delicate, and his physical
training imperfect; but, even in his youth, he
aspired to become a public speaker. His young
ambition was first fired by a famous speech delivered
in open court by the orator Callistratus on the
affair of Oropus. Hearing some of his instructors
arranging to be present, he persuaded one of them
to take him, and was provided with a place where
he might sit unseen, and hear all that was said.
He was struck by the enthusiastic congratulations
which the orator afterwards received on the success
of his cause, and still more by the powerful effect
of an eloquence which seemed capable of carrying
everything before it. Casting aside all other kinds
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? xvi LIFE OF DEMOSTHENES FROM 384 T0 861 13. 0.
of learning, he concentrated all his endeavours on
training himself as a speaker (Plutarch Dem. c. 5).
On completing his eighteenth year he came of
age (366), and prepared to seek redress for the
wrongs he had suffered at the hands of his guardians.
For this purpose he secured the aid of Isaeus, the
ablest man of his time as an authority on the law
- of inheritance, and the influence of that expert may
be traced in the speeches Against Aphobus, delivered
, by Demosthenes in suing his guardians
misfigfiw in 363 (07-. 27, 28, etc. ) Although
successful in his suit, all that he had
practically gained was a wider reputation and a
higher degree of confidence in public speaking.
He had happily tasted something of the fame
which could be won by success in forensic pleading,
and he now began to 100k forward to playing a
part as a political speaker. But, on the first
occasion on which he addressed the Assembly,
he was received with derision. His timid bearing,
his involved style, together with the weakness of
his voice, the shortness of his breath, and the in-
distinctness of his articulation, had made it difficult
for his audience to understand him. He left the
place of assembly and went down to the Peiraeus,
where he was wandering about disconsolately, when
an old man, who in his boyhood had listened to
Pericles, came up to him and assured him that his
style was really Periclean ; at the same time he
upbraided him for his faintheartedness in not facing
his audience boldly, and for his neglect of his general
health and his bodily powers (Plut. Dem. c. 6).
Demosthenes himself, in his old age, told a younger
orator, Demetrius of Phalerum, how he had mastered
the defects of an indistinct pronunciation by
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? SPEECHES AGAINST APHOBUS, ETC. xvii
reciting long passages with pebbles in his mouth,
and how he had trained his voice by declaiming
when he was out of breath, either with running, or
with walking up a steep ascent (c. 11). On another
occasion, in his early days, when he had failed to
win the ear of the Assembly, and was going home
disconcerted, he was met by the actor Satyrus who
drew his attention to the weak points in his delivery,
and made him see by his own rehearsal the vast
importance of action. In complete seclusion he
daily devoted himself to the improvement of his
delivery (c. 7). He also gave himself constant
practice in writing down, rearranging and repeating
arguments suggested in conversation with others,
changing and modifying the form of expression in
every possible way. This laborious method gave
rise to an impression that he had no great natural
aptitude for speaking, and there is no doubt as to
his general reluctance to speak without due pre-
meditation (0. 8), although, on the few occasions when
he broke this rule, he did so with the most brilliant
success. His usual reserve, and his indifference to
any distinction that might be attained by these
sudden outbursts of unpremeditated speech, were,
no less than his style and delivery, inspired by a
desire to follow in the footsteps of Pericles (c. 9).
His own delivery was much admired in the popular
Assembly, though cultivated people, like Demetrius,
considered it inelegant and unmanly, while one of
his own contemporaries contrasted his artificial
manner and his forced pathos with the reserve and
the self-possession of older speakers who discoursed
with the multitude in a stately and magnificent
way; admitting, however, that his speeches, when
read, appeared far superior to those of others in
b
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? xviii SPEECH ON THE TRIERARC'HIO' GROWN
point of construction and in force (0. 11 ? ? 3, 4).
While Pericles was the orator's great exemplar, he
also owed much to the historical associations by
which he was surrounded. To the future statesman
the monuments of art that crowned the Acropolis
were eloquent memorials of the greatness of Athens
in the Periclean age. He was also much indebted
to the literature of his country. With the published
masterpieces of Isocrates he was undoubtedly familiar,
and their influence may be traced in some of the
smoother and more flowing portions of the Philippics. 1
To Thucydides his debt was still deeper, as may be
seen not only in the matter of some of his speeches,
but also in the style of all. He resembles Thucydides
in his brevity, conciseness and energy, in his
occasional harshness and roughness, and his power of
arousing the emotions, though he is certainly no
slavish follower of the historian's manner, nor does
he emulate his archaic and unfamiliar diction, or his
anacoluthic constructions, or his far too frequent
obscurity. 2
Next to the speeches against his guardians, the
earliest extant speech delivered by the orator himself
mp1 1. 0;, appears to be that On the Trierarchic
1222121395 Crown (Or. 51). In 359 B. C. Demo-
- 359 no sthenes went to the Hellespont as trier-
arch under Cephisodotus, and it was probably in the
same year that he delivered this speech. He here
claims the crown promised to the trierarch who was
the first to have his ship ready for sea. It is the
1 OZ. 3 ? ? ~23--9. Blass Attischc Beredsamlceit In i 892 notices
the Isocratean use of the Plural of abstract words, such as
repiouaia. and eziropla in Dem. 3 ? 33, 5 ? 8.
2 Dionysius Hal. Time. 53, 55. Blass Le. 87 f2. Cp. Introd.
to Cicero's Orato'r pp. xxiv--xxix.
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? AGAINST SPUDIAS, C'ALLIOLES, CONON xix
only extant speech delivered by Demosthenes before
the Council of the Five Hundred. 1
Before embarking on his public career, he devoted
much of his time to the not unprofitable profession
of a Ao-yoypdqtos, or writer of speeches to be delivered
by litigants on either side in the law-courts of
Athens. The earliest place among these 'Private
Speeches' has been assigned, on grounds of style, to
the speech Against Spudias on a ques-
tion of dowry (Or. 41) and to that ? 11522?
"
Against Callicles in a claim for damages KGKKi'EMG
caused by cutting off an alleged water-
. s-
course (Or. 55). The speech Against
Conon in a case of assault and battery is sometimes
ascribed to this period (Or. 54). 2
A second period of the orator's career opens
with the close of the Social War in 355. At the
beginning of this period stands the KM-'Avspm
speech Against Androtion (Or. 22), TWWS 355 "-
written for one Diodorus, attacking as illegal Andro-
tion's proposal to confer a golden crown on the out-
going Council in spite of the fact that in its year of
office it had added no new ships to the navy. The
importance to Athens of an effective navy is here
emphasised by an appeal to the experience of the
past; and, although large portions of the speech
are solely concerned with points of law, the closing
passage 67--7 8) has the same lofty tone that is
attained in the great deliberative speeches of subse-
quent years. In particular, the fine allusion to
"the former achievements' of Athens, and to 'the
splendour of the sacred edifices raised to commemorate
1 Blass m i 2422 f. _
2 ASchaefer Dem. and swim Zeit iii B 251. Clinton sug-
gests 341 no. Op. Select Private Oratiorts ii3 pp. lxiii, 242.
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? xx AGAINST ANDROTION, AGAINST LEPTJNES
them, yonder Propylaea, the Parthenon, the porticos
and arsenals ' (22 ? 76) is repeated three years later
in the speech Against Aristocrates (23 207), and
finds an echo six years later in the Third Olgnthiae :--
The public works (of our forefathers) are edifices and
ornaments of such beauty and grandeur, in temples and
in dedicated offerings, that posterity has no power to
surpass them (3 ? 25).
To the followmg year, 354, belongs the first
speech delivered by Demosthenes himself in a forensic
Mb; Ayn-TL cause of public interest, the speech
"I" 354 "- Against the Law of Leptines (Or. 20).
The law in question abolished the hereditary privi-
leges bestowed on public benefactors and made it illegal
to grant such privileges for the future. Demosthenes
attacks this law as unconstitutional, inexpedient, and
dishonourable, as involving a breach of public faith
and a slur on the good name of Athens. The tone
of the speech, delivered (it will be remembered) by
the orator himself, as contrasted with the scathing
invective directed against the life of Androtion in a
speech written for another, is marked by a studious
moderation, and even by courtesy towards the orator's
opponents. He here appears as 'a sound constitu-
tional lawyer, or rather a sagacious politician, warning
his countrymen against the dangers of an unwise
measure of legislation. ' 1 He dwells in glowing
terms on the exploits of the Athenian commanders,
Conon 68--74) and Chabrias 75-86) ; and he
refers, for the first time, to Philip of Macedon, to his
capture of Pydna (in 357) and Poteidaea (in 356), and
1 CRKennedy Dem. against Leptines etc. p. 235. Cp. Introd.
to Leptines p. xxxviii.
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? ON THE S Y MM ORIES xxi
to the bounties which were the source of his influence
over his adherents 61, 63).
To the latter part of the same year belongs the
first deliberative, or parliamentary, speech of Demo-
sthenes that has come down to us,-- mp, my
the speech 0n the Symmories, which erup- OpLGW
is also the first of his three Hellenic B'c'
orations (Or. 14). The debate is on war with Persia,
and the orator seizes the opportunity to lay down some
leading principles of foreign policy and to propose a
measure for the reform of the navy. The proposal is
connected with the recent application to the trier-
archy of the system of 'symmories' already applied
to the war-tax. 1 It aims at ensuring greater prompti-
tude in naval preparations by means of a better
organisation, by breaking up the larger boards into
smaller groups, and by assigning to each group a
corresponding portion of the fleet and its proper
share of the funds. 2 The reform is introduced in
terms that form a forecast of the tone of the
Philtmaies.
The first and foremost point in our preparations is
for every citizen to be willing and eager to do his duty.
Whenever you have all had a common wish and every
man has thereupon deemed that its accomplishment
depended on himself, nothing has ever escaped you. On
the other hand, whenever you have wished only, and
then looked at one another, each expecting to be idle,
while his neighbour did the work, nothing has ever come
to pass (14 15).
Though actual foes of Athens in Greece, as
contrasted with contingent enemies such as Persia,
1 See note on 2 ? 29 l. 270.
2 14 ? ? 16--23 ; Butcher's Demosthenes pp. 37 f.
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? xxii A GA INS T TIM OGRA TES
are vaguely indicated, there is no real reference to
Philip 11). For the present, the orator seems
hardly conscious of the distant cloud that is destined
ere long to darken the Hellenic horizon.
In the following year the client for whom
Demosthenes had composed the speech Against
mm Androtion, secured his services for a
TLpoxpd'rovg similar speech Against Timocrates.
353 B'c' Androtion had been acquitted, but he
had since been required to refund certain public
moneys which he had embezzled, and, in default, he
was liable to imprisonment as a debtor to the State.
In the interest of Androtion and others in the same
position, Timocrates proposed and carrieda measure for
extending the period during which payment of public
debts might be made, and for this measure he was
indicted by Diodorus. Large portions of the speech
are almost identical with that Against Androtion,
many of the arguments are merely verbal and
technical, some of them even captions and sophistical.
A higher level, however, is reached in the appeal to
the public interests which would be imperilled if the
State were prevented from enforcing payment of its
dues.
Even without such a law as this, we might congratulate
ourselves if we could meet the sudden emergencies of war ;
but, with it, supposing you should be summoned to arms
in your own defence, do you suppose that the enemy will
await the dilatory subterfuges of miscreants at home?
(? ? 94--5). The defendant has deluded you into passing
a law which not merely opens but actually destroys our
prison-house, and makes our courts of justice useless (? 209).
It is the laws that are the morals of the State (? 210).
It is the laws that preserve and consolidate all our
advantages 216).
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? FOR THE MEGALOPOLITANS xxiii
To the same year belongs the second of the three
Hellenic orations. The new city of Megalopolis had
been created by Epaminondas by a union of the
scattered villages of the Arcadian league, and at this
moment the pressure of the Phocian war (355--346
B. C. ) prevented Thebes from being able to protect it.
Sparta seized the opportunity to propose a general
restoration of ancient rights, the restitution of Oropus
to Athens, and of Messene to Sparta, and the
dissolution of Megalopolis. Being thus threatened
by Sparta, and unable to obtain help from Thebes,
Megalopolis sent for aid to Athens. In the speech
For the Megalopolitans (Or. 16) Demo- {ma Me a_
sthenes in the main supported their Ao-rgohvrve? v
plea, insisting on the maintenance of the 3 B'c'
balance of power between Thebes and Sparta, point-
ing to his country's traditional policy of protecting the
oppressed, and urging finally that it would be a grave
mistake to drive the Arcadians to seek help else-
where. We have no direct information as to the
vote taken at the close of the debate ; but we know
that war ensued between Sparta and Megalopolis, and
that Athens remained neutral. We know above all
that, when the Arcadians were once more in distress,
taught perhaps by their present experience, they
applied for aid (and not in vain)--not to Athens but
to the king of Macedon.
It may here be convenient to mention the third
of the Hellenic orations, that On the Liberty of the
Rhodians (Or. 15). It resembles the m 1 . r s
speech For the Megalopolitans in so far as iazfigzve? sg'
1t 1s a reply to an appeal for aid against 351 1w-
oppression ; it resembles that On the Symmories in its
attitude towards the power of Persia. The death of
Maussolus, prince of Caria, and the succession of
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? xxiv ON THE LIBERTY OF THE RHODIANS
Artemisia prompted the democrats who had been
exiled from Rhodes to ask Athens to release them
from subjection to Caria. Rhodes had revolted
from Athens in the Social \Var (357--355 B. C. );
but Demosthenes urged his audience to forgive and
forget the past, and generously to aid the cause of
democracy against oligarchy, of freedom against
oppression. He denounces as deserters those of
the politicians of Athens who form the oligarchical
faction 33), while, with regard to foreign foes,
he says of the king of Persia and the king of
Macedonia:
There are some, I observe, who often despise Philip,
as a person of no account, while they dread the king of
Persia as a powerful enemy to any that he chooses.
Well, if we are to refrain from resisting the former
because he is contemptible, while we yield everything to
the latter because he is formidable, against whom are we
to take the field, 0 Athenians? (15 ? 24).
The date of the speech is uncertain. If, with
Diodorus (xvi 36), we place the death of Maussolus
in 353 B. C. , it falls in the same year as the Megalo-
politan speech and two years before the First Philippic
(351 13. 0. ) If, with Pliny (xxxvi 30, 47), we place
the death in 351 and follow Dionysius in assigning
the speech to 351--50, it falls a few months later
than the First Philippic. The tone of the reference
to Philip in the speech For the Rhodians is different
from that of the first speech against Philip; and, if
the later date is accepted, we are forced to assume
that the impression produced by the First Philippic
had already passed away, and that Philip's temporary
inaction had relieved Athens from any immediate
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? AGAINST ARISTOC'RA TES xxv
apprehension. 1 The speech For the ledians had prob
ably no immediate, certainly no permanent result:
a few years later (346 13. 0. ) Rhodes was still under
the power of the successor of Artemisia (5 25).
As a forensic speech of the same period as those
against Androtion and Timocrates we have the
speech Against Aristocrates (Or. 23). "UNA"
It is written for the opponent of a siren d'rovg
proposal carried in the Council declaring 35 "'c'
the person of Charidemus to be inviolable and any
one who killed him to be an outlaw from the dominions
of Athens and her allies. Charidemus was a com-
mander of mercenaries now in the service of the
Thracian chieftain Cersobleptes, and the privileges
proposed on his behalf were inspired by the hope
of his aiding Athens to recover Amphipolis. The
speech composed by Demosthenes denounces the
proposal as illegal and inexpedient, and Charidemus
as an unprincipled adventurer who was undeserving
of such a distinction (see note on 3 5). Towards
the close, it dwells on the honours cautiously con-
ferred by Athens on her benefactors in the past, and
compares them with those so lavishly granted by her
in recent times. The contrast between the splendour
of the mansions now occupied by leading statesmen
with the pcttiness and paltriness of the public build-
ings of the day (23 206--8) is repeated at a
future time in the Third Olgnthiae (3 25--9).
Again, it is in this speech that, towards the close of
a warning against faithless friendships, we find the
first public avowal of Philip as the acknowledged
enemy Of Athens :--6 ,uaiMo-"ra. viiv fipiv e? XngS ci'wu
1 351--50 13. 0. is the date preferred by ASchaefer i 4872, and
Blass m i 3052. Reasons in favour of 353 are urged in Butcher's
Dem. pp. 43 f.
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? xxvi PHILIP THE ENEMY OF ATHENS
doxdw 'I'L'Aunros oirroo't (23 121). \Vhat Philip
had done for Olynthus and the return he had received
are here described. Philip had delivered Poteidaea
to the Olynthians ' after he had expended large sums
in the war with you, when he had taken and might
have held it himself ,- yet the Olynthians trust him
so little now, that they have made friends of you,
who they know would most gladly kill both Philip's
friends and Philip himself, and they promise to make
you their allies also' 107--9). Philip is afterwards
pointed out as an obvious example of reckless ambition.
I need not ask, men of Athens, if you know of that
Macedonian, Philip. Though it was more desirable for
him to receive the revenues of all Macedonia in peace
than those of Amphipolis with peril, and to be connected
with yourselves as his hereditary allies than with the
faithless Thessalians, he has chosen to make small profits
and to have treacherous friends and to incur danger in
preference to living in security. Prosperity and prudence
do not go together: many, by aiming at greater things,
often lose what they have already (? ? 111--3).
The speech Against Aristocrates failed in its
immediate purpose. In the following year Chari-
demus was still in the service of Athens; for, in
the autumn of 351 B. C. , he was sent on a mission
to the Thracian Chersonesus. Philip had invaded
Thrace twelve months before, and the rival princes,
Amadocus and Cersobleptes, had submitted to his
control. 1 Henceforth, it was no longer against
petty Thracian princes that Athens had to protect
the Chersonesus, but against the ever growing and
increasing might of Macedonia.
Having briefly traced the career of Demosthenes
1 ASchaefer i 446 f2.
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? MACEDONIA BEFORE THE REIGN OF PHILIP xxvii
down to the time when he first appeared as the
opponent of Philip in the First Philippic, we now
turn to a retrospective view of the rise and progress
of the Macedonian power.
II Macedonia. before the reign of Philip
The name of Macedonia was originally confined
to the inland district between the rivers Lydias
and Haliacmon ; but, even before the Geography of
accession of Philip, Macedonia had mamma-
gradually extended itself, until its limit to the south
was Thessaly, to the north Paeonia, to the west
Illyria and the northern continuation of the range of
Pindus, while to the east it successively reached the
Axius and the Strymon. The mountain-ranges
stretching eastward from Pindus divide the country
into a series of deep valleys encircled by lofty
heights and admitting of very slight communication
with one another. These successive valleys are
known as the districts of Orestis and Elimia, both
traversed by the Haliacmon ; that of the Eordaei near
the source of the Lydias ; that of Lyncestis near the
rise of the Erigon ; and lastly the valley of the Axius
which receives the Erigon in the earlier part of its
course, and, after flowing through the vast upland
plain of Pelagonia, bursts through a ravine now
known as the Iron Gate, and ultimately falls into
the bay of Therma, near the outlet of the united
streams of the Lydias and Haliacmon. While
Macedonia in itself is thus pre-eminently a highland
region remote from the sea, and difficult of access
owing to its mountain-ranges, the inaccessibility
caused by its mountains is in part corrected by its
rivers.
