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phocion-第8部分

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dearest and most faithful of his friends; begged to be allowed to
drink the poison first。 〃My friend;〃 said he; 〃you ask what I am loath
and sorrowful to give; but as I never yet in all my life was so
thankless as to refuse you; I must gratify you in this also。〃 After
they had all drunk of it; the poison ran short; and the executioner
refused to prepare more; except they would pay him twelve drachmas; to
defray the cost of the quantity required。 Some delay was made; and
time spent; when Phocion called one of his friends; and observing that
a man could not even die at Athens without paying for it; requested
him to give the sum。
  It was the nineteenth day of the month Munychion; on which it was
the usage to have a solemn procession in the city; in honour of
Jupiter。 The horsemen; as they passed by; some of them threw away
their garlands; others stopped; weeping; and casting sorrowful looks
towards the prison doors; and all the citizens whose minds were not
absolutely debauched by spite and passion; or who had any humanity
left; acknowledged it to have been most impiously done; not; at least;
to let that day pass; and the city so be kept pure from death and a
public execution at the solemn festival。 But as if this triumph had
been insufficient; the malice of Phocion's enemies went yet further;
his dead body was excluded from burial within the boundaries of the
country; and none of the Athenians could light a funeral pile to
burn the corpse; neither durst any of his friends venture to concern
themselves about it。 A certain Conopion; a man who used to do these
offices for hire; took the body and carried it beyond Eleusis; and
procuring fire from over the frontier of Megara; burned it。
Phocion's wife; with her servant…maids; being present and assisting at
the solemnity; raised there an empty tomb; and performed the customary
libations; and gathering up the bones in her lap; and bringing them
home by night; dug a place for them by the fireside in her house;
saying; 〃Blessed hearth; to your custody I commit the remains of a
good and brave man; and; I beseech you; protect and restore them to
the sepulchre of his fathers; when the Athenians return to their right
minds。〃
  And; indeed; a very little time and their own sad experience soon
informed them what an excellent governor; and how great an example and
guardian of justice and of temperance they had bereft themselves of。
And now they decreed him a statue of brass; and his bones to be buried
honourably at the public charge; and for his accusers; Agnonides
they took themselves; and caused him to be put to death。 Epicurus
and Demophilus; who fled from the city for fear; his son met with; and
took his revenge upon them。 This son of his; we are told; was in
general of an indifferent character; and once when enamoured of a
slave girl kept by a common harlot merchant; happened to hear
Theodorus; the atheist; arguing in the Lyceum; that if it were a
good and honourable thing to buy the freedom of a friend in the
masculine; why not also of a friend in the feminine; if; for
example; a master; why not also a mistress? So putting the good
argument and his passion together; he went off and purchased the
girl's freedom。 The death which was thus suffered by Phocion revived
among the Greeks the memory of that of Socrates; the two cases being
so similar; and both equally the sad fault and misfortune of the city。





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