LettersMachine readable text


Letters
By Demosthenes
Edited by: Norman W. DeWitt
Norman J. DeWitt

Cambridge, MA, Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann Ltd. 1949



Perseus Documents Collection Table of Contents



On Political Harmony

Concerning His Own Restoration

Concerning the Sons of Lycurgus

On the Slanderous Attacks of Theramenes

To Heracleodorus

To the Council and the Assembly of the Athenians


Funded by The Annenberg CPB/Project

 

Letter 1

On Political Harmony

[sect. 1]

1 For one who is about to take any serious step, whether in speech or action, I assume that the proper course is to take his beginning from the gods. Accordingly I entreat all the gods and goddesses that what is best for the democracy of the Athenians and for those who bear goodwill toward the democracy, both now and for time to come, I may myself be moved to write and the members of the Assembly to adopt. With this prayer, having hopes of good inspiration from the gods, I address this message.

Demosthenes to the Council and the Assembly sends greeting. [sect. 2]

Concerning the question of my return2 to my native land I always bear in mind that it will be for you as a body to decide; consequently I am writing nothing about it at the present moment. Observing, however, that the present occasion, if you but choose the right course, is capable of securing for you at one stroke glory and safety and freedom, not for yourselves alone but for all the rest of the Greeks as well, but that, if you act in ignorance or be led astray, it would not be easy to secure the same opportunity again, I thought I ought to place before the public the state of my opinion on these questions. [sect. 3] It is a difficult thing, I know, for advice conveyed by letter to hold its ground,3 because you Athenians have a way of opposing many suggestions without waiting to understand them. In the case of a speaker, of course, it is possible to perceive what you want and easy to correct your misapprehensions; but the written page possesses no such aid against those who raise a clamor. In spite of this fact, if you will but consent to listen in silence and have the patience to learn all that I have to say, I think that,to speak in the hope of divine favourbrief though the writing is, I shall myself be found to be doing my duty by you with all goodwill and that I shall demonstrate clearly where your interests lie. [sect. 4] Not as supposing you were running short of speakers, or of those, either, who will say glibly and without real thought what happens to occur to them, did I decide to send the letter; but I desired, after putting plainly before those who like to make speeches all that I happen to know through experience and long association with public business, first, to furnish them with ample means of arriving at what I deem to be your interests, and second, to render easy for the people the choice of the best procedures. Such, then, were the considerations that prompted me to write the letter.