<GetPassage xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns="http://chs.harvard.edu/xmlns/cts">
            <request>
                <requestName>GetPassage</requestName>
                <requestUrn>urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0032.tlg002.perseus-eng2:4.4.14-4.4.25</requestUrn>
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            <reply>
                <urn>urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0032.tlg002.perseus-eng2:4.4.14-4.4.25</urn>
                <passage>
                    <TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><text xml:lang="eng"><body><div type="translation" xml:lang="eng" n="urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0032.tlg002.perseus-eng2" subtype="translation"><div type="textpart" subtype="book" n="4"><div type="textpart" subtype="chapter" n="4"><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="14"><p><milestone unit="para" ed="P"/><said direct="true">Laws,</said>
                                said Hippias, <said direct="true">can hardly be thought of much
                                    account, <persName><surname>Socrates</surname></persName>, or
                                    observance of them, seeing that the very men who passed them
                                    often reject and amend them.</said><milestone unit="para" ed="P"/><said direct="true">Yes,</said> said
                                        <persName><surname>Socrates</surname></persName>, <said direct="true">and after going to war, cities often make peace
                                    again.</said><milestone unit="para" ed="P"/><said direct="true">To be sure.</said><milestone unit="para" ed="P"/><said direct="true">Then is there any difference, do you think,
                                    between belittling those who obey the laws on the ground that
                                    the laws may be annulled, and blaming those who behave well in
                                    the wars on the ground that peace may be made? Or do you really
                                    censure those who are eager to help their fatherland in the
                                    wars?</said><milestone unit="para" ed="P"/><said direct="true">No, of course not.</said></p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="15"><p><milestone unit="para" ed="P"/><said direct="true">Lycurgus the
                                    Lacedaemonian now — have you realised that he would not have
                                    made <placeName key="perseus,Sparta">Sparta</placeName> to
                                    differ from other cities in any respect, had he not established
                                    obedience to the laws most securely in her? Among rulers in
                                    cities, are you not aware that those who do most to make the
                                    citizens obey the laws are the best, and that the city in which
                                    the citizens are most obedient to the laws has the best time in
                                    peace and is irresistible in war?</said></p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="16"><p><said direct="true" rend="merge">And again, agreement is deemed the
                                    greatest blessing for cities: their senates and their best men
                                    constantly exhort the citizens to agree, and everywhere in
                                        <placeName key="tgn,1000074">Greece</placeName> there is a
                                    law that the citizens shall promise under oath to agree, and
                                    everywhere they take this oath. The object of this, in my
                                    opinion, is not that the citizens may vote for the same choirs,
                                    not that they may praise the same flute-players, not that they
                                    may select the same poets, not that they may like the same
                                    things, but that they may obey the laws. For those cities whose
                                    citizens abide by them prove strongest and enjoy most happiness;
                                    but without agreement no city can be made a good city, no house
                                    can be made a prosperous house.</said></p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="17"><p><said direct="true" rend="merge">And how is the individual citizen
                                    less likely to incur penalties from the state, and more certain
                                    to gain honour than by obeying the laws? How less likely to be
                                    defeated in the courts or more certain to win? Whom would anyone
                                    rather trust as guardian of his money or sons or daughters? Whom
                                    would the whole city think more trustworthy than the man of
                                    lawful conduct? From whom would parents or kinsfolk or servants
                                    or friends or fellow-citizens or strangers more surely get their
                                    just rights? Whom would enemies rather trust in the matter of a
                                    truce or treaty or terms of peace? Whom would men rather choose
                                    for an ally? And to whom would allies rather entrust leadership
                                    or command of a garrison, or cities? Whom would anyone more
                                    confidently expect to show gratitude for benefits received? Or
                                    whom would one rather benefit than him from whom he thinks he
                                    will receive due gratitude? Whose friendship would anyone
                                    desire, or whose enmity would he avoid more earnestly? Whom
                                    would anyone less willingly make war on than him whose
                                    friendship he covets and whose enmity he is fain to avoid, who
                                    attracts the most friends and allies, and the fewest opponents
                                    and enemies?</said></p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="18"><p><milestone unit="para" ed="P"/><said direct="true" rend="merge">So,
                                    Hippias, I declare lawful and just to be the same thing. If you
                                    are of the contrary opinion, tell me.</said><milestone unit="para" ed="P"/><said direct="true">Upon my word,
                                            <persName><surname>Socrates</surname></persName>,</said>
                                answered Hippias, <said direct="true">I don’t think my opinion is
                                    contrary to what you have said about Justice.</said></p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="19"><p><milestone unit="para" ed="P"/><said direct="true">Do you know what
                                    is meant by <q type="soCalled">unwritten laws,</q>
                                    Hippias?</said><milestone unit="para" ed="P"/><said direct="true">Yes, those that are uniformly observed in every
                                    country.</said><milestone unit="para" ed="P"/><said direct="true">Could you say that men made
                                    them?</said><milestone unit="para" ed="P"/><said direct="true">Nay, how could that be, seeing that they cannot all meet
                                    together and do not speak the same language?</said><milestone unit="para" ed="P"/><said direct="true">Then by whom have these
                                    laws been made, do you suppose?</said><milestone unit="para" ed="P"/><said direct="true">I think that the gods made these
                                    laws for men. For among all men the first law is to fear the
                                    gods.</said></p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="20"><p><milestone unit="para" ed="P"/><said direct="true">Is not the duty
                                    of honouring parents another universal law?</said><milestone unit="para" ed="P"/><said direct="true">Yes, that is
                                    another.</said><milestone unit="para" ed="P"/><said direct="true">And that parents shall not have sexual intercourse
                                    with their children nor children with their
                                    parents?</said><note resp="Loeb" anchored="true"><title>Cyropaedia</title> V. i. 10.</note><milestone unit="para" ed="P"/><said direct="true">No, I don’t think that
                                    is a law of God.</said><milestone unit="para" ed="P"/><said direct="true">Why so?</said><milestone unit="para" ed="P"/><said direct="true">Because I notice that some transgress
                                    it.</said></p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="21"><p><milestone unit="para" ed="P"/><said direct="true">Yes, and they do
                                    many other things contrary to the laws. But surely the
                                    transgressors of the laws ordained by the gods pay a penalty
                                    that a man can in no wise escape, as some, when they transgress
                                    the laws ordained by man, escape punishment, either by
                                    concealment or by violence.</said></p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="22"><p><milestone unit="para" ed="P"/><said direct="true">And pray what
                                    sort of penalty is it,
                                        <persName><surname>Socrates</surname></persName>, that may
                                    not be avoided by parents and children who have intercourse with
                                    one another?</said><milestone unit="para" ed="P"/><said direct="true">The greatest, of course. For what greater penalty
                                    can men incur when they beget children than begetting them
                                    badly?</said></p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="23"><p><milestone unit="para" ed="P"/><said direct="true">How do they beget
                                    children badly then, if, as may well happen, the fathers are
                                    good men and the mothers good women?</said><milestone unit="para" ed="P"/><said direct="true">Surely because it is not
                                    enough that the two parents should be good. They must also be in
                                    full bodily vigour: unless you suppose that those who are in
                                    full vigour are no more efficient as parents than those who have
                                    not yet reached that condition or have passed
                                    it.</said><milestone unit="para" ed="P"/><said direct="true">Of
                                    course that is unlikely.</said><milestone unit="para" ed="P"/><said direct="true">Which are the better
                                    then?</said><milestone unit="para" ed="P"/><said direct="true">Those who are in full vigour, clearly.</said><milestone unit="para" ed="P"/><said direct="true">Consequently those who
                                    are not in full vigour are not competent to become
                                    parents?</said><milestone unit="para" ed="P"/><said direct="true">It is improbable, of course.</said><milestone unit="para" ed="P"/><said direct="true">In that case then, they
                                    ought not to have children?</said><milestone unit="para" ed="P"/><said direct="true">Certainly not.</said><milestone unit="para" ed="P"/><said direct="true">Therefore those who
                                    produce children in such circumstances produce them
                                    wrongly?</said><milestone unit="para" ed="P"/><said direct="true">I think so.</said><milestone unit="para" ed="P"/><said direct="true">Who then will be bad fathers and mothers,
                                    if not they?</said><milestone unit="para" ed="P"/><said direct="true">I agree with you there too.</said></p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="24"><p><milestone unit="para" ed="P"/><said direct="true">Again, is not the
                                    duty of requiting benefits universally recognised by
                                    law?</said><milestone unit="para" ed="P"/><said direct="true">Yes, but this law too is broken.</said><milestone unit="para" ed="P"/><said direct="true">Then does not a man pay forfeit for
                                    the breach of that law too, in the gradual loss of good friends
                                    and the necessity of hunting those who hate him? Or is it not
                                    true that, whereas those who benefit an acquaintance are good
                                    friends to him, he is hated by them for his ingratitude, if he
                                    makes no return, and then, because it is most profitable to
                                    enjoy the acquaintance of such men, he hunts them most
                                    assiduously?</said><milestone unit="para" ed="P"/><said direct="true">Assuredly,
                                        <persName><surname>Socrates</surname></persName>, all this
                                    does suggest the work of the gods. For laws that involve in
                                    themselves punishment meet for those who break them, must, I
                                    think, be framed by a better legislator than man.</said></p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="25"><p><milestone unit="para" ed="P"/><said direct="true">Then, Hippias, do
                                    you think that the gods ordain what is just or what is
                                    otherwise?</said><milestone unit="para" ed="P"/><said direct="true">Not what is otherwise — of course not; for if a
                                    god ordains not that which is just, surely no other legislator
                                    can do so.</said><milestone unit="para" ed="P"/><said direct="true">Consequently, Hippias, the gods too accept the
                                    identification of just and lawful.</said><milestone unit="para" ed="P"/>By such words and actions he encouraged Justice in those
                                who resorted to his company.</p></div></div></div></div></body></text></TEI>
                </passage>
            </reply>
            </GetPassage>