The Anatomy of Melancholy by Robert Burton
page 112 of 2094 (05%)
page 112 of 2094 (05%)
![]() | ![]() |
|
that means their countries are plagued, [489]"and they themselves often
ruined, banished, or murdered by conspiracy of their subjects, as Sardanapalus was, Dionysius Junior, Heliogabalus, Periander, Pisistratus, Tarquinius, Timocrates, Childericus, Appius Claudius, Andronicus, Galeacius Sforza, Alexander Medices," &c. Whereas the princes or great men are malicious, envious, factious, ambitious, emulators, they tear a commonwealth asunder, as so many Guelfs and Gibelines disturb the quietness of it, [490]and with mutual murders let it bleed to death; our histories are too full of such barbarous inhumanities, and the miseries that issue from them. Whereas they be like so many horseleeches, hungry, griping, corrupt, [491] covetous, _avaritice mancipia_, ravenous as wolves, for as Tully writes: _qui praeest prodest, et qui pecudibus praeest, debet eorum utilitati inservire_: or such as prefer their private before the public good. For as [492]he said long since, _res privatae publicis semper officere_. Or whereas they be illiterate, ignorant, empirics in policy, _ubi deest facultas_, [493]_virtus_ (Aristot. _pol. 5, cap. 8._) _et scientia_, wise only by inheritance, and in authority by birthright, favour, or for their wealth and titles; there must needs be a fault, [494]a great defect: because as an [495]old philosopher affirms, such men are not always fit. "Of an infinite number, few alone are senators, and of those few, fewer good, and of that small number of honest, good, and noble men, few that are learned, wise, discreet and sufficient, able to discharge such places, it must needs turn to the confusion of a state." For as the [496]Princes are, so are the people; _Qualis Rex, talis grex_: and which [497]Antigonus right well said of old, _qui Macedonia regem erudit, omnes etiam subditos erudit_, he that teacheth the king of Macedon, |
|