LettersMachine readable text


Letters
By Demosthenes
Edited by: Norman W. DeWitt
Norman J. DeWitt

Cambridge, MA, Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann Ltd. 1949



Perseus Documents Collection Table of Contents



On Political Harmony

Concerning His Own Restoration

Concerning the Sons of Lycurgus

On the Slanderous Attacks of Theramenes

To Heracleodorus

To the Council and the Assembly of the Athenians


Funded by The Annenberg CPB/Project

 

Letter 4

On the Slanderous Attacks of Theramenes

[sect. 1]

67 Demosthenes to the Council and the Assembly sends greeting.

I hear that Theramenes68 has uttered various slanderous statements concerning me and in particular that he taunts me with being ill-fated.69 Now I am not astonished that this man should be ignorant that abusive language, which demonstrates no vice on the part of the one against whom it is spoken, carries no weight with fair-minded people. For if one who in his way of life is insolent, by birth is not a citizen, and was reared from childhood in a brothel, had even a faint perception in such matters, it would be more unintelligible than complete ignorance. [sect. 2] As for this man, If some day I return and am restored to my rights, I shall plan to have a talk with him about the drunken abuse he directs at me and at you, and I believe that, even if he is devoid of shame, I shall render him more self-restrained. To you, however, in the interest of the common good, I wish to make known by letter what statements I have to make about these matters. Listen to my words with all attention, for I think they are not only worth hearing but also worth remembering.