they saddled her with an unmentionable past and said that the school of rhetoric she ran was a breeding ground for girls of easy virtue.
They accused her of scorning the gods, an offense that might have cost her life. Before a tribunal of fifteen hundred men, Pericles took up the defense. Aspasia was absolved, although in his three-hour speech Pericles forgot to say that rather than scorning the gods, she believed the gods scorn us and spoil our ephemeral human joys.
By then, Pericles had already tossed his wife out of his bed and his house, and was living with Aspasia. He sired a son with her, and to defend the child’s rights he broke a law he himself had decreed.
Socrates interrupted his classes to listen to Aspasia, and Anaxagoras cited her opinions.
Plutarch wondered: “What artful power did that woman possess that allowed her to inspire philosophers and dominate the most eminent political figures?”
SAPPHO
Of Sappho not much is known.
They say she was born twenty-six hundred years ago on the island of Lesbos, thus giving lesbians their name.
They say she was married, that she had a son, and that she threw herself off a cliff because a sailor paid her no heed. They also say she was short and ugly.
Who knows? We men do not like it when a woman prefers another woman instead of succumbing to our irresistible charms. In the year 1703, the Catholic Church, bastion of male power, ordered all of Sappho’s books burned.
A handful of poems survived.
EPICURIUS
In his garden in Athens, Epicurius spoke out against fear. Against fear of the gods, death, pain, and failure.
It is simply vanity, he said, to believe the gods care about us. From their bastion of immortality, their perfection, they offer neither prizes nor punishments. Why fear the gods when we fleeting, sorry beings merit no more than their indifference?
Death is not frightening either, he said. While we exist, death does not, and when death exists, we no longer do.
Fear pain? Fear of pain is what hurts most, and nothing gives more pleasure than pain’s departure.
Fear failure? What failure? Nothing is enough if enough is too little, but what glory could compare to the delight of conversing with friends on a sunny afternoon? What power equals the urge to love, to eat, to drink?
Let’s turn our inescapable mortality, Epicurius suggested, into an eternal feast.
ORIGIN OF INSECURITY
Greek democracy loved freedom but lived off its prisoners. Slaves, male and female, worked the land,
built the roads,
mined the mountains in search of silver and stone,
erected the houses,
wove the clothes,
sewed the shoes,
cooked,
washed,
swept,
forged lances and shields, hoes and hammers,
gave pleasure at parties and in brothels,
and raised the children of their owners.
A slave was cheaper than a mule. Slavery, despicable topic, rarely appeared in poetry or onstage or in the paintings that decorated urns and walls. Philosophers ignored it, except to confirm it as the natural fate of inferior beings, and to sound the alarm. Watch out, warned Plato. Slaves, he said, unavoidably hate their owners and only constant vigilance can keep them from murdering us all.
And Aristotle maintained that military training for the citizenry was crucial, given the climate of insecurity.
SLAVERY ACCORDING TO ARISTOTLE
One who is a human being belonging by nature not to himself but to another is by nature a slave; and being a man he is an article of property, and an article of property is an instrument . . . The slave is a living tool, just as a tool is an inanimate slave.
Hence there are by nature various classes of rulers and ruled. For the freeman rules the slave, the male the female, and the man the child.
The art of war includes hunting, an art which we ought to practice against wild beasts and against men who, though intended by nature to be governed, refuse to submit; for war of such a kind is naturally just.
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