Page:Hesiod, and Theognis.djvu/161

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IN OPPOSITION.
147

ful or temporary. A great deal of his counsel to his friend exhibits him in the light of a politic watcher of events, at one time deprecating what at another he advocated. Who would recognise the champion of the "wise and good" and of their policy, pure and simple, in these verses, breathing a spirit of progress and expediency?—

"Waste not your efforts: struggle not, my friend,
Idle and old abuses to defend.
Take heed! the very measures that you press,
May bring repentance with their own success."—(F.)

There is also an inconsistency to be accounted for doubtless upon politic grounds, in the discrepant advice which he gives Cyrnus as to the friend to be chosen in the crisis then imminent. At one time he is all for "determined hearty partisans," and deprecates association with reckless associates, as well as with fair-weather friends:—

"Never engage with a poltroon or craven,
Avoid him, Cyrnus, as a treacherous haven.
Those friends and hearty comrades, as you think,
Ready to join you, when you feast or drink,
Those easy friends from difficulty shrink."—(F.)

But anon he is found subscribing to the principle that "no man is wholly bad or wholly good," and recommending his friend to conciliate, as we say, Tom, Dick, and Harry, so as to be "all things to all men."

"Join with the world; adopt with every man
His party views, his temper, and his plan;