ATHENS: ITS RISE AND FALL
BOOK II.
CHAPTER II.
The Tyranny of
Pisistratus
I. Although the
great constitutional reforms of Solon were no doubt carried into effect during
his archonship, yet several of his legislative and judicial enactments were
probably the work of years. When we consider the many interests to conciliate,
the many prejudices to overcome, which in all popular states cripple and delay
the progress of change in its several details, we find little difficulty in
supposing, with one of the most luminous of modern scholars,
that Solon had ample occupation for twenty years after the date of his
archonship. During this period little occurred in the foreign affairs of Athens
save the prosperous termination of the Cirrhaean war, as before recorded. At
home the new constitution gradually took root, although often menaced and
sometimes shaken by the storms of party and the general desire for further
innovation.
The eternal
consequence of popular change is, that while it irritates the party that loses
power, it cannot content the party that gains. It is obvious that each
concession to the people but renders them better able to demand concessions
more important. The theories of some—the demands of others—harassed
the lawgiver, and threatened the safety of the laws. Solon, at length, was
induced to believe that his ordinances required the sanction and repose of time,
and that absence —that moral death—would not only free himself from
importunity, but his infant institutions from the frivolous disposition of
change. In his earlier years he had repaired, by commercial pursuits, estates
that had been empoverished by the munificence of his father; and, still
cultivating the same resources, he made pretence of his vocation to solicit
permission for an absence of ten years. He is said to have obtained a solemn
promise from the people to alter none of his institutions during that period;
and thus he departed from the city (probably B. C. 575), of whose future
glories he had laid the solid foundation. Attracted by his philosophical habits
to that solemn land, beneath whose mysteries the credulous Greeks revered the
secrets of existent wisdom, the still adventurous Athenian repaired to the
cities of the Nile, and fed the passion of speculative inquiry from the
learning of the Egyptian priests. Departing thence to Cyprus, he assisted, as
his own verses assure us, in the planning of a new city, founded by one of the
kings of that beautiful island, and afterward invited to the court of Croesus
(associated with his father Alyattes, then living), he imparted to the Lydian,
amid the splendours of state and the adulation of slaves, that well-known
lesson on the uncertainty of human grandeur, which, according to Herodotus,
Croesus so seasonably remembered at the funeral pile.
II. However prudent
had appeared to Solon his absence from Athens, it is to be lamented that he did
not rather brave the hazards from which his genius might have saved the state,
than incur those which the very removal of a master-spirit was certain to
occasion. We may bind men not to change laws, but we cannot bind the spirit and
the opinion, from which laws alone derive cogency or value. We may guard
against the innovations of a multitude, which a wise statesman sees afar off,
and may direct to great ends; but we cannot guard against that dangerous
accident—not to be foreseen, not to be directed—the ambition of a
man of genius! During the absence of Solon there rose into eminence one of
those remarkable persons who give to vicious designs all the attraction of
individual virtues. Bold, generous, affable, eloquent, endowed with every gift
of nature and fortune— kinsman to Solon, but of greater wealth and more
dazzling qualities— the young Pisistratus, son of Hippocrates, early
connected himself with the democratic or highland party. The Megarians, who had
never relinquished their designs on Salamis, had taken an opportunity,
apparently before the travels, and, according to Plutarch, even before the
legislation of Solon, to repossess themselves of the island. When the Athenians
were enabled to extend their energies beyond their own great domestic
revolution, Pisistratus obtained the command of an expedition against these
dangerous neighbours, which was attended with the most signal success. A
stratagem referred to Solon by Plutarch, who has with so contagious an
inaccuracy blended into one the two several and distinct expeditions of
Pisistratus and Solon, ought rather to be placed to the doubtful glory of the
son of Hippocrates. A number of young men sailed with
Pisistratus to Colias, and taking the dress of women, whom they there seized
while sacrificing to Ceres, a spy was despatched to Salamis, to inform the
Megarian guard that many of the principal Athenian matrons were at Colias, and
might be easily captured. The Megarians were decoyed, despatched a body of men
to the opposite shore, and beholding a group in women's attire dancing by the
strand, landed confusedly to seize the prize. The pretended females drew forth
their concealed weapons, and the Megarians, surprised and dismayed, were cut
off to a man. The victors lost no time in setting sail for Salamis, and easily
regained the isle. Pisistratus carried the war into Megara itself, and captured
the port of Nisaea. These exploits were the foundation of his after greatness;
and yet young, at the return of Solon, he was already at the head of the
democratic party. But neither his rank, his genius, nor his popular influence
sufficed to give to his faction a decided eminence over those of his rivals.
The wealthy nobles of the lowlands were led by Lycurgus—the moderate
party of the coastmen by Megacles, the head of the Alcmaeonidae. And it was in
the midst, of the strife and agitation produced by these great sections of the
people that Solon returned to Athens.
III. The venerable
legislator was received with all the grateful respect he deserved; but age had
dimmed the brilliancy of his powers. His voice could no longer penetrate the
mighty crowds of the market-place. New idols had sprung up—new passions
were loosed—new interests formed, and amid the roar and stir of the
eternal movement, it was in vain for the high-hearted old man to recall those
rushing on the future to the boundaries of the past. If unsuccessful in public,
he was not discouraged from applying in private to the leaders of the several
parties. Of all those rival nobles, none deferred to his advice with so marked
a respect as the smooth and plausible Pisistratus. Perhaps, indeed, that
remarkable man contemplated the same objects as Solon himself,—although
the one desired to effect by the authority of the chief, the order and the
energy which the other would have trusted to the development of the people.
But, masking his more interested designs, Pisistratus outbid all competition in
his seeming zeal for the public welfare. The softness of his manners—his
profuse liberality—his generosity even to his foes—the splendid
qualities which induced Cicero to compare him to Julius Cesar,
charmed the imagination of the multitude, and concealed the selfishness of his
views. He was not a hypocrite, indeed, as to his virtues—a dissembler
only in his ambition. Even Solon, in endeavouring to inspire him with a true
patriotism, acknowledged his talents and his excellences. "But for ambition,"
said he, "Athens possesses no citizen worthier than Pisistratus." The
time became ripe for the aspiring projects of the chief of the democracy.
IV. The customary
crowd was swarming in the market-place, when suddenly in the midst of the
assembly appeared the chariot of Pisistratus. The mules were
bleeding—Pisistratus himself was wounded. In this condition the demagogue
harangued the people. He declared that he had just escaped from the enemies of
himself and the popular party, who (under the auspices of the Alcmaeonidae) had
attacked him in a country excursion. He reminded the crowd of his services in
war—his valour against the Megarians—his conquest of Nisaea. He
implored their protection. Indignant and inflamed, the favouring audience
shouted their sympathy with his wrongs. "Son of Hippocrates," said
Solon, advancing to the spot, and with bitter wit, "you are but a bad
imitator of Ulysses. He wounded himself to delude his enemies—you to
deceive your countrymen." The sagacity of the reproach was
unheeded by the crowd. A special assembly of the people was convened, and a
partisan of the demagogue moved that a body-guard of fifty men, armed but with
clubs, should be assigned to his protection. Despite the infirmities of his
age, and the decrease of his popular authority, Solon had the energy to oppose
the motion, and predict its results. The credulous love of the people swept
away all precaution—the guard was granted. Its number did not long
continue stationary; Pisistratus artfully increased the amount, till it swelled
to the force required by his designs. He then seized the citadel—the
antagonist faction of Megacles fled—and Pisistratus was master of Athens.
Amid the confusion and tumult of the city, Solon retained his native courage.
He appeared in public—harangued the citizens—upbraided their
blindness—invoked their courage. In his speeches he bade them remember
that if it be the more easy task to prevent tyranny, it is the more glorious
achievement to destroy it. In his verses he poured forth the indignant sentiment which a thousand later bards have
borrowed and enlarged; "Blame not Heaven for your tyrants, blame
yourselves." The fears of some, the indifference of others, rendered his
exhortations fruitless! The brave old man sorrowfully retreated to his house,
hung up his weapons without his door, and consoled himself with the melancholy
boast that "he had done all to save his country, and its laws." This
was his last public effort against the usurper. He disdained flight; and, asked
by his friends to what he trusted for safety from the wrath of the victor,
replied, "To old age,"—a sad reflection, that so great a man
should find in infirmity that shelter which he claimed from glory.
V. The remaining
days and the latter conduct of Solon are involved in obscurity. According to
Plutarch, he continued at Athens, Pisistratus showing him the utmost respect,
and listening to the counsel which Solon condescended to bestow upon him:
according to Diogenes Laertius, he departed again from his native city,
indignant at its submission, and hopeless of its freedom, refusing all
overtures from Pisistratus, and alleging that, having established a free
government, he would not appear to sanction the success of a tyrant. Either
account is sufficiently probable. The wisdom of Solon might consent to mitigate
what he could not cure, or his patriotism might urge him to avoid witnessing
the changes he had no power to prevent. The dispute is of little importance. At
his advanced age he could not have long survived the usurpation of Pisistratus,
nor can we find any authority for the date of his death so entitled to credit
as that of Phanias, who assigns it to the year following the usurpation of
Pisistratus. The bright race was already run. According to the grave authority
of Aristotle, the ashes of Solon were scattered over the Isle of Salamis, which
had been the scene of his earlier triumphs; and Athens, retaining his immortal,
boasted not his perishable remains.
VI. Pisistratus
directed with admirable moderation the courses of the revolution he had
produced. Many causes of success were combined in his favour. His enemies had
been the supposed enemies of the people, and the multitude doubtless beheld the
flight of the Alcmaeonidae (still odious in their eyes by the massacre of
Cylon) as the defeat of a foe, while the triumph of the popular chief was
recognised as the victory of the people. In all revolutions the man who has sided
with the people is permitted by the people the greatest extent of license. It
is easy to perceive, by the general desire which the Athenians had expressed
for the elevation of Solon to the supreme authority that the notion of regal
authority was not yet hateful to them, and that they were scarcely prepared for
the liberties with which they were intrusted. But although they submitted thus
patiently to the ascendency of Pisistratus, it is evident that a less
benevolent or less artful tyrant would not have been equally successful. Raised
above the law, that subtle genius governed only by the law; nay, he affected to
consider its authority greater than his own. He assumed no title—no
attribute of sovereignty. He was accused of murder, and he humbly appeared
before the tribunal of the Areopagus—a proof not more of the moderation
of the usurper than of the influence of public opinion. He enforced the laws of
Solon, and compelled the unruly tempers of his faction to subscribe to their
wholesome rigour. The one revolution did not, therefore, supplant, it
confirmed, the other. "By these means," says Herodotus,
"Pisistratus mastered Athens, and yet his situation was far from
secure."
VII. Although the
heads of the more moderate party, under Megacles, had been expelled from
Athens, yet the faction, equally powerful and equally hostile, headed by
Lycurgus, and embraced by the bulk of the nobles, still remained. For a time,
extending perhaps to five or six years, Pisistratus retained his power; but at
length, Lycurgus, uniting with the exiled Alcmaeonidae, succeeded in expelling
him from the city. But the union that had led to his expulsion ceased with that
event. The contests between the lowlanders and the coastmen were only more inflamed
by the defeat of the third party, which had operated as a balance of power, and
the broils of their several leaders were fed by personal ambition as by
hereditary animosities. Megacles, therefore, unable to maintain equal ground
with Lycurgus, turned his thoughts towards the enemy he had subdued, and sent
proposals to Pisistratus, offering to unite their forces, and to support him in
his pretensions to the tyranny, upon condition that the exiled chief should
marry his daughter Coesyra. Pisistratus readily acceded to the terms, and it
was resolved by a theatrical pageant to reconcile his return to the people. In
one of the boroughs of the city there was a woman named Phya, of singular
beauty and lofty stature. Clad in complete armour, and drawn in a chariot, this
woman was conducted with splendour and triumph towards the city. By her side
rode Pisistratus—heralds preceded their march, and proclaimed her
approach, crying aloud to the Athenians "to admit Pisistratus, the
favourite of Minerva, for that the goddess herself had come to earth on his
behalf."
The sagacity of the
Athenians was already so acute, and the artifice appeared to Herodotus so
gross, that the simple Halicarnassean could scarcely credit the authenticity of
this tale. But it is possible that the people viewed the procession as an
ingenious allegory, to the adaptation of which they were already disposed; and
that, like the populace of a later and yet more civilized people, they hailed
the goddess while they recognised the prostitute.
Be that as it may, the son of Hippocrates recovered his authority, and
fulfilled his treaty with Megacles by a marriage with his daughter. Between the
commencement of his first tyranny and the date of his second return, there was
probably an interval of twelve years. His sons were already adults. Partly from
a desire not to increase his family, partly from some superstitious
disinclination to the blood of the Alcmaeonidae, which the massacre of Cylon
still stigmatized with contamination, Pisistratus conducted himself towards the
fair Coesyra with a chastity either unwelcome to her affection, or afflicting
to her pride. The unwedded wife communicated the mortifying secret to her
mother, from whose lips it soon travelled to the father. He did not view the
purity of Pisistratus with charitable eyes. He thought it an affront to his own
person that that of his daughter should be so tranquilly regarded. He entered
into a league with his former opponents against the usurper, and so great was
the danger, that Pisistratus (despite his habitual courage) betook himself
hastily to flight:—a strange instance of the caprice of human events,
that a man could with a greater impunity subdue the freedom of his country,
than affront the vanity of his wife!
VIII. Pisistratus,
his sons and partisans, retired to Eretria in Euboea: there they deliberated as
to their future proceedings—should they submit to their exile, or attempt
to retrieve, their power? The councils of his son Hippias prevailed with
Pisistratus; it was resolved once more to attempt the sovereignty of Athens.
The neighbouring tribes assisted the exiles with forage and shelter. Many
cities accorded the celebrated noble large sums of money, and the Thebans
outdid the rest in pernicious liberality. A troop of Argive adventurers came
from the Peloponnesus to tender to the baffled usurper the assistance of their
swords, and Lygdamis, an individual of Naxos, himself ambitious of the
government of his native state, increased his resources both by money and
military force. At length, though after a long and tedious period of no less
than eleven years, Pisistratus resolved to hazard the issue of open war. At the
head of a foreign force he advanced to Marathon, and pitched his tents upon its
immortal plain. Troops of the factious or discontented thronged from Athens to
his camp, while the bulk of the citizens, unaffected ay such desertions, viewed
his preparations with indifference. At length, when they heard that Pisistratus
had broken up his encampment, and was on his march to the city, the Athenians
awoke from their apathy, and collected their forces to oppose him. He continued
to advance his troops, halted at the temple of Minerva, whose earthly
representative had once so benignly assisted him, and pitched his tents
opposite the fane. He took advantage of that time in which the Athenians,
during the heats of the day, were at their entertainments, or indulging the
noontide repose, still so grateful to the inhabitants of a warmer climate, to
commence his attack. He soon scattered the foe, and ordered his sons to
overtake them in their flight, to bid them return peacefully to their
employments, and fear nothing from his vengeance. His clemency assisted the
effect of his valour, and once more the son of Hippocrates became the master of
the Athenian commonwealth.
IX. Pisistratus lost
no time in strengthening himself by formidable alliances. He retained many
auxiliary troops, and provided large pecuniary resources.
He spared the persons of his opponents, but sent their children as hostages to
Naxos, which he first reduced and consigned to the tyranny of his auxiliary,
Lygdamis. Many of his inveterate enemies had perished on the field—many
fled from the fear of his revenge. He was undisturbed in the renewal of his
sway, and having no motive for violence, pursued the natural bent of a mild and
generous disposition, ruling as one who wishes men to forget the means by which
his power has been attained. Pisistratus had that passion for letters which
distinguished most of the more brilliant Athenians. Although the poems of Homer
were widely known and deeply venerated long before his time, yet he appears, by
a more accurate collection and arrangement of them, and probably by bringing
them into a more general and active circulation in Athens, to have largely
added to the wonderful impetus to poetical emulation, which those immortal
writings were calculated to give.
When we consider how
much, even in our own times, and with all the advantages of the press, the
diffused fame and intellectual influence of Shakspeare and Milton have owed to
the praise and criticism of individuals, we may readily understand the kind of
service rendered by Pisistratus to Homer. The very example of so eminent a man
would have drawn upon the poet a less vague and more inquiring species of
admiration; the increased circulation of copies—the more frequent public
recitals—were advantages timed at that happy season when the people who
enjoyed them had grown up from wondering childhood to imitative and studious
youth. And certain it is, that from this period we must date the marked and
pervading influence of Homer upon Athenian poetry; for the renown of a poet
often precedes by many generations the visible influence of his peculiar
genius. It is chiefly within the last seventy years that we may date the
wonderful effect that Shakspeare was destined to produce upon the universal
intellect of Europe. The literary obligations of Athens to Pisistratus were not
limited to his exertions on behalf of Homer: he is said to have been the first
in Greece who founded a public library, rendering its treasures accessible to
all. And these two benefits united, justly entitle the fortunate usurper to the
praise of first calling into active existence that intellectual and literary
spirit which became diffused among the Athenian people, and originated the
models and masterpieces of the world. It was in harmony with this part of his
character that Pisistratus refitted the taste and socialized the habits of the
citizens, by the erection of buildings dedicated to the public worship, or the
public uses, and laid out the stately gardens of the Lyceum—(in
after-times the favourite haunt of philosophy), by the banks of the river
dedicated to song. Pisistratus did thus more than continue the laws of
Solon—he inculcated the intellectual habits which the laws were designed
to create. And as in the circle of human events the faults of one man often
confirm what was begun by the virtues of another, so perhaps the usurpation of
Pisistratus was necessary to establish the institutions of Solon. It is clear
that the great lawgiver was not appreciated at the close of his life; as his
personal authority had ceased to have influence, so possibly might have soon
ceased the authority of his code. The citizens required repose to examine, to
feel, to estimate the blessings of his laws—that repose they possessed
under Pisistratus. Amid the tumult of fierce and equipoised factions it might
be fortunate that a single individual was raised above the rest, who, having
the wisdom to appreciate the institutions of Solon, had the authority to
enforce them. Silently they grew up under his usurped but benignant sway,
pervading, penetrating, exalting the people, and fitting them by degrees to the
liberty those institutions were intended to confer. If the disorders of the
republic led to the ascendency of Pisistratus, so the ascendency of Pisistratus
paved the way for the renewal of the republic. As Cromwell was the
representative of the very sentiments he appeared to subvert—as Napoleon
in his own person incorporated the principles of the revolution of France, so
the tyranny of Pisistratus concentrated and imbodied the elements of that democracy
he rather wielded than overthrew.
X. At home, time and
tranquillity cemented the new laws; poetry set before the emulation of the
Athenians its noblest monument in the epics of Homer; and tragedy put forth its
first unmellowed fruits in the rude recitations of Thespis (B. C. 535). Pisistratus sought also to counterbalance the growing passion for commerce by
peculiar attention to agriculture, in which it is not unlikely that he was
considerably influenced by early prepossessions, for his party had been the
mountaineers attached to rural pursuits, and his adversaries the coastmen
engaged in traffic. As a politician of great sagacity, he might also have been
aware, that a people accustomed to agricultural employments are ever less
inclined to democratic institutions than one addicted to commerce and
manufactures; and if he were the author of a law, which at all events he more
rigidly enforced, requiring every citizen to give an account of his mode of
livelihood, and affixing punishments to idleness, he could not have taken wiser
precautions against such seditions as are begot by poverty upon indolence, or
under a juster plea have established the superintendence of a concealed police.
We learn from Aristotle that his policy consisted much in subjecting and
humbling the pediaei, or wealthy nobles of the lowlands. But his very affection
to agriculture must have tended to strengthen an aristocracy, and his humility
to the Areopagus was a proof of his desire to conciliate the least democratic
of the Athenian courts. He probably, therefore, acted only against such
individual chiefs as had incurred his resentment, or as menaced his power; nor
can we perceive in his measures the systematic and deliberate policy, common
with other Greek tyrants, to break up an aristocracy and create a middle class.
XI. Abroad, the
ambition of Pisistratus, though not extensive, was successful. There was a town
on the Hellespont called Sigeum, which had long been a subject of contest
between the Athenians and the Mitylenaeans. Some years before the legislation
of Solon, the Athenian general, Phryno, had been slain in single combat by
Pittacus, one of the seven wise men, who had come into the field armed like the
Roman retiarius, with a net, a trident, and a dagger. This feud was terminated
by the arbitration of Periander, tyrant of Corinth, who awarded Sigeum to the
Athenians, which was then in their possession, by a wise and plausible decree,
that each party should keep what it had got. This war was chiefly remarkable
for an incident that introduces us somewhat unfavourably to the most animated
of the lyric poets. Alcaeus, an eminent citizen of Mitylene, and, according to
ancient scandal, the unsuccessful lover of Sappho, conceived a passion for
military fame: in his first engagement he seems to have discovered that his
proper vocation was rather to sing of battles than to share them. He fled from
the field, leaving his arms behind him, which the Athenians obtained, and
suspended at Sigeum in the temple of Minerva. Although this single action,
which Alcaeus himself recorded, cannot be fairly held a sufficient proof of the
poet's cowardice, yet his character and patriotism are more equivocal than his
genius. Of the last we have ample testimony, though few remains save in the
frigid grace of the imitations of Horace. The subsequent weakness and civil
dissensions of Athens were not favourable to the maintenance of this distant
conquest—the Mitylenaeans regained Sigeum. Against this town Pisistratus
now directed his arms—wrested it from the Mitylenaeans— and,
instead of annexing it to the republic of Athens, assigned its government to
the tyranny of his natural son, Hegesistratus,—a stormy dominion, which
the valour of the bastard defended against repeated assaults.
XII. But one
incident, the full importance of which the reader must wait a while to
perceive, I shall in this place relate. Among the most powerful of the
Athenians was a noble named Miltiades, son of Cypselus. By original descent he
was from the neighbouring island of Aegina, and of the heroic race of Aeacus;
but he dated the establishment of his house in Athens from no less distant a
founder than the son of Ajax. Miltiades had added new lustre to his name by a victory
at the Olympic games. It was probably during the first tyranny of Pisistratus that an adventure, attended with vast results to Greece, befell this noble. His
family were among the enemies of Pisistratus, and were regarded by that
sagacious usurper with a jealous apprehension which almost appears prophetic.
Miltiades was, therefore, uneasy under the government of Pisistratus, and
discontented with his position in Athens. One day, as he sat before his door
(such is the expression of the enchanting Herodotus, unconscious of the
patriarchal picture he suggests), Miltiades observed certain strangers
pass by, whose garments and spears denoted them to be foreigners. The sight
touched the chief, and he offered the strangers the use of his house, and the
rites of hospitality. They accepted his invitation, were charmed by his
courtesy, and revealed to him the secret of their travel. In that narrow
territory which, skirting the Hellespont, was called the Chersonesus, or
Peninsula, dwelt the Doloncians, a Thracian tribe. Engaged in an obstinate war
with the neighbouring Absinthians, the Doloncians had sent to the oracle of
Delphi to learn the result of the contest. The Pythian recommended the messengers
to persuade the first man who, on their quitting the temple, should offer them
the rites of hospitality, to found a colony in their native land. Passing
homeward through Phocis and Boeotia, and receiving no such invitation by the
way, the messengers turned aside to Athens; Miltiades was the first who offered
them the hospitality they sought; they entreated him now to comply with the
oracle, and assist their countrymen; the discontented noble was allured by the
splendour of the prospect—he repaired in person to Delphi—consulted
the Pythian—received a propitious answer—and collecting all such of
the Athenians as his authority could enlist, or their own ambition could decoy,
he repaired to the Chersonesus (probably B. C. 559). There he fortified a great
part of the isthmus, as a barrier to the attacks of the Absinthians: but
shortly afterward, in a feud with the people of Lampsacus, he was taken
prisoner by the enemy. Miltiades, however, had already secured the esteem and
protection of Croesus; and the Lydian monarch remonstrated with the Lampsacenes
in so formidable a tone of menace, that the Athenian obtained his release, and
regained his new principality. In the meanwhile, his brother Cimon (who was
chiefly remarkable for his success at the Olympic games), sharing the political
sentiments of his house, had been driven into exile by Pisistratus. By a
transfer to the brilliant tyrant of a victory in the Olympic chariot-race, he,
however, propitiated Pisistratus, and returned to Athens.
VIII. Full of years,
and in the serene enjoyment of power, Pisistratus died (B. C. 527). His
character may already be gathered from his actions: crafty in the pursuit of
power, but magnanimous in its possession, we have only, with some
qualification, to repeat the eulogium on him ascribed to his greater kinsman,
Solon—"That he was the best of tyrants, and without a vice save that
of ambition."

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