Page:History of Greece Vol II.djvu/420

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.

404 HISTORY OF GREECE. ward, lawless, and distempered community, steps the venerable missionary from Delphi, breathes into men's minds new im- pulses, and an impatience to shake off the. old social and political Adam, and persuades the rich, voluntarily abnegating their temporal advantages, to welcome with satisfaction a new system, wherein no distinction shall be recognized, except that of good or evil desert. 1 Having thus regeneratei the national mind, he parcels out the territory of Laconia into equal lots, leaving no superiority to any one. Fraternal harmony becomes the reign- ing sentiment, while the coming harvests present the gratifying spectacle of a paternal inheritance recently distributed, with the brotherhood contented, modest, and docile. Such is the picture with which " mischievous Oneirus " cheats the fancy of the pa- triotic Agis, whispering the treacherous message that the gods have promised him success in a similar attempt, and thus seduc- ing him into that fatal revolutionary course, which is destined to bring himself, his wife, and his aged mother, to the dungeon and the hangman's rope. 2 That the golden dream just described was dreamed by some Spartan patriots is certain, because it stands recorded in Plu- tarch; that it was not dreamed by the authors of centuries preceding Agis, I have already endeavored to show ; that the earnest feelings, of sickness of the present and yearning for a better future under the colors of a restored past, which filled the soul of this king and his brother-reformers, combined with the levelling tendency between rich and poor which really was inhe- rent in the Lykurgean discipline, were amply sufficient to beget such a dream, and to procure for it a place among the great deeds of the old lawgiver, so much venerated and so little known, this too I hold to be unquestionable. Had there been any evi- dence that Lykurgus had interfered with private property, to the limited extent which Dr. Thirlwall and other able critics imag- ine, that he had resumed certain lands unjustly taken by the