but were in some instances acquired by purchase. Society being thus based on vicious principles, it is not wonderful that the Grecian states were the scene of constant civil broils.
Sparta—Lycurgus. At the beginning of this period of Grecian history,
our attention is powerfully attracted by a very remarkable series of
proceedings which took place in Lacedæmon, or Laconia, a country of southern
Greece, of which the chief city was Sparta. This city being in a state
of intestine disorder, it was agreed by many of the inhabitants to invite
Lycurgus, the son of one of their late kings, to undertake the important
task of preparing a new constitution for his country. Fortified with the
sanction of the Delphic oracle, he commenced this difficult duty, not only
settling the form of government, but reforming the social institutions and
manners of the people. The government he established consisted of two
joint kings, with a limited prerogative, and who acted as presidents of a
senate of twenty-eight aged men. The functions of the senate were deliberative
as well as executive, but no law could be passed without receiving
the consent of the assembled citizens. The most remarkable of the
arrangements of Lycurgus was his attempt to abolish difference of rank,
and even difference of circumstances, among the people. He resolved on
the bold measure of an equal division of lands, and actually parceled out
the Laconian territory into 39,000 lots, one of which was given to each
citizen of Sparta, or free inhabitant of Laconia. Each of these lots was
of such a size as barely sufficed to supply the wants of a single family—for
Lycurgus was determined that no person should be placed in such circumstances
as would permit of luxurious living.
Lycurgus carried into effect a number of other visionary projects: he abolished the use of money, with the hope of preventing undue accumulation of wealth; prohibited foreigners from entering the country, and the natives from going abroad, in order to preserve simplicity of manners among the people; directed that all men, without distinction of rank or age, should eat daily together at public tables, which were furnished with the plainest food; and finally, ordained that all the children who were born, and seemed likely to be strong, should be reared by public nurses, under a rigid system of privation and personal activity, while the weak infants should be thrown out to the fields to perish. The citizens, when they had attained the age of manhood, were engaged in martial exercises, all labor being left to the slaves, or helots, as they were termed; and in short, the whole nation was but a camp of soldiers, and war was reckoned the only legitimate profession. These laws were in some measure suited to the rude condition of the Spartans, but, as being opposed to some of the best and strongest principles in human nature, they could not possibly endure, and there is reason to believe that some of them were not strictly enforced. It is not unusual to see historians use the term Spartan virtue with a certain degree of admiration of its quality; but the Spartans had, in reality, no moral dignity, certainly no benevolence, in their virtue, either public or private. They were a small confederacy of well-trained soldiers; and merely as such, deserve no mark of our respect or esteem. The manner in which they used their helots was at once barbarous and cruel. The murder of a serf by a free citizen was not punishable by law; nay, it was even allowable for the young Spartans to lie in wait, as a kind of sport,