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Contents: Book 9: Fragments of Book 9Book 10: Fragments of Book 10Book 10a: Fragments of Uncertain ProvenienceBook 11: Contents of the Eleventh Book of DiodorusBook 12: Contents of the Twelfth Book of DiodorusBook 13: Contents of the Thirteenth Book of DiodorusBook 14: Contents of the Fourteenth Book of DiodorusBook 15: Contents of the Fifteenth Book of DiodorusBook 16: Contents of the Sixteenth Book of DiodorusBook 17: The Seventeenth Book of Diodorus: in Two Parts |
Diodorus Siculus, Library
Contents of the Twelfth Book of Diodorus
Editions and translations: Greek | English
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XII. First of all, in the case of men who brought home a stepmother over their children he ordained as their punishment that they should have no part in counselling their fatherland, since he believed that men who planned so badly with respect to their own children would likewise be bad counsellors for their fatherland. For, he said, whoever had been fortunate in their first marriages should rest satisfied with their good lot, whereas whoever had been unfortunate in marriage and then made the same mistake a second time should be regarded as men without sense. [2] Men who had been found guilty of false accusation should, he decreed, wear wherever they went a wreath of tamarisk, in order that they might show to all their fellow citizens that they had won the highest prize for wickedness. As a consequence certain men who had been judged guilty of this charge, being unable to bear their great disgrace, voluntarily removed themselves from life. When this took place, every man who had made a practice of false accusation was banished from the city, and the government enjoyed a blessed life of freedom from this evil. [3] Charondas also wrote a unique law on evil association, which had been overlooked by all other lawgivers. He took it for granted that the characters of good men are in some cases perverted to evil by reason of their friendship and intimacy with bad persons,1 and that badness, like a pestilent disease, sweeps over the life of mankind and infects the souls of the most upright; for the road to the worse slopes downward and so provides an easier way to take; and this is the reason why many men of fairly good character, ensnared by deceptive pleasures, get stranded upon very bad habits. Wishing, therefore, to remove this source of corruption, the lawgiver forbade the indulgence in friendship and intimacy with unprincipled persons, provided actions at law against evil association, and by means of severe penalties diverted from their course those who were about to err in this manner. [4] Charondas also wrote another law which is far superior to the one just mentioned and had also been overlooked by lawgivers before his time. He framed the law that all the sons of citizens should learn to read and write, the city providing the salaries of the teachers; for he assumed that men of no means and unable to provide the fees from their own resources would be cut off from the noblest pursuits.
1 Cp. Aesch. Seven 599-600: en panti pragei d' esth' homilias kakês
kakion ouden, karpos ou komisteos.
("In every issue naught is more evil than evil partnership--the fruit thereof must have no garnering." Tr. by Smyth in L.C.L.).
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This text is based on the following book(s): Diodorus Siculus. Diodorus of Sicily in Twelve Volumes with an English Translation by C. H. Oldfather. Vol. 4-8. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press; London: William Heinemann, Ltd. 1989. OCLC: 24758311 ISBN: 0674994132, 0674994221, 0674994396, 0674994280, 0674994647
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