XENOPHON |
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Rev E. M. Walker
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XENOPHON, Greek [*soldier], historian and philosophical essayist, the son of Gryllus, was born at Athens about 430 BCE.' He belonged to an equestrian family of the deme of Erchia. It may be inferred from passages in the Hellenica that he [* took part in the campaign of Thrasyllus (410),] fought at Arginusae (406), and that he was present at the return of Alcibiades (408), the trial of the Generals and the overthrow of the Thirty.
The Anabasis (composed at Scillus between 379 and 371) is a work of singular interest, and is brightly and pleasantly written. Xenophon, like Caesar, tells the story in the third person, and there is a straightforward manliness about the style, with a distinct flavor of a cheerful lightheartedness, which at once enlists our sympathies. His description of places and of relative distances is very minute and painstaking. The researches of modern travelers attest his general accuracy. It is expressly stated by Plutarch and Diogenes La'ertius that the Anabasis was the work of Xenophon, and the evidence from style is conclusive. The allusion (Hellenica, iii. i, 2) to :Themistogenes of Syracuse as the author shows that Xenophon published it under an assumed name.
The Cyropaedia, a political and philosophical romance, which describes the boyhood and training of Cyrus, hardly answers to its name, being for the most part an account of the beginnings of the Persian empire and of the victorious career of Cyrus its founder. The Cyropaedia contains in fact
the author's own ideas of training and education, as derived conjointly from the teachings of Socrates and his favorite Spartan institutions. It was said to have been written in opposition to the Republic of Plato. A distinct moral purpose, to which literal truth is sacrificed, runs through the work. For instance, Cyrus is represented as dying peacefully in his bed, whereas, according to Herodotus, he fell in a campaign against the Massagetae.
The Hellenica written at Corinth, after 362, is the only contemporary account of the period covered by it (411-362) that has come down to us. It consists of two distinct parts; books i. and ii., which are intended to form a continuation of the work of Thucydides, and bring the history down to the fall of the Thirty, and books iiivi., the Hellenica proper, which deal with the period from 401 to 362, and give the history of the Spartan and Theban hegemonies, down to the death of Epaminondas. There is, however, no ground for the view that these two parts were written and published as separate works. There is probably no justification for the charge of deliberate falsification. It must be admitted, however, that he had strong political prejudices, and that these prejudices have influenced his narrative. [*As the description of the Ionian campaign of Thrasyllus in 410 (Hellenica, i. 2) is clearly derived from Xenophon's own reminiscences, he must have taken part in this campaign, and cannot therefore have been less than twenty years of age at the time.]
The Memorabilia, or " Recollections of Socrates," in four books, was written to defend Socrates against the charges of impiety and corrupting the youth, repeated after his death by the sophist Polycrates. The work is not a literary masterpiece; it lacks coherence and unify, and the picture it gives of Socrates fails to do him justice. Still, as far as it goes, it no doubt faithfully describes the philosopher's manner of life and style of conversation. It was the moral and practical side of Socrates's teaching which most interested Xenophon; into his abstruse metaphysical speculations he seems to have made no attempt to enter: for these indeed he had neither taste nor genius. Moving within a limited range of ideas, he doubtless gives us considerably less than the real Socrates, while Plato gives us something
more." It is probable that the work in its present form is an abridgment. Xenophon has left several minor works, some of which are very interesting and give an insight into the home life of the Greeks.
The Oeconomics (to some extent a continuation of the Memorabilia,
and sometimes regarded as the fifth book of the same) deals with the management
of the house and of the farm, and presents a pleasant and amusing picture of
the Greek wife and of her home duties. There are some good practical remarks on
matrimony and on the respective duties of husband and wife. The treatise, which
is in the form of a dialogue between Socrates and a certain Ischomachus, was
translated into Latin by Cicero. In the essays on horsemanship
(Hipparchicus) and hunting (Cynegeticus), Xenophon deals with
matters of which he had a thorough practical knowledge. In the first he gives
rules how to choose a horse, and then tells how it is to be groomed and ridden
and generally managed. The Cynegeticus deals chiefly with the hare,
though the author speaks also of boar-hunting and describes the hounds, tells
how they are to be bred and trained, and gives specimens of suitable names for
them. On all this he writes with the zest of an enthusiastic sportsman, and he
observes that those nations whose upper classes have a taste for field-sports
will be most likely to be successful in war. Both treatises may still be read
with interest by the modern reader.
The Hipparchicus explains the duties of a cavalry officer; it is not,
according to our ideas, a very scientific treatise, showing that the art of war
was but very imperfectly developed and that the military operations of the
Greeks were on a somewhat petty scale. He dwells at some length on the moral
qualities which go to the making of a good cavalry officer, and hints very
plainly that there must be strict attention to religious duties.
The Symposium, or " Banquet," to some extent the complement of
the Memorabilia, is a brilliant little dialogue in which Socrates is the
prominent figure. He is represented as "improving the occasion,"
which is that of a lively Athenian supper-party, at which there is much
drinking, with flute-playing, and a dancing-girl from Syracuse, who amuses the
guests with the feats of a professional conjuror. Socrates's table-talk runs
through a variety of topics, and winds up with a philosophical disquisition on
the superiority of true heavenly love to its earthly or sensual counterfeit,
and with an earnest exhortation to one of the party, who had just won a victory
in the public games, to lead a noble life and do his duty to his country.
There are also two short essays, attributed to him, on the political
Constitution of Sparta and Athens, written with a decided bias in favor of
the former, which he praises without attempting to criticize. Sparta seems to
have represented to Xenophon the best conceivable mixture of monarchy and
aristocracy. The second is certainly not by Xenophon, but was probably written
by a member of the oligarchical party shortly after the beginning of the
Peloponnesian War. In the essay on the Revenues of Athens (written in
355) he offers suggestions for making Athens less dependent on tribute received
from its allies. Above all, he would have Athens use its influence for the
maintenance of peace in the Greek world and for the settlement of questions by
diplomacy, the temple at Delphi being for this purpose an independent center
and supplying a divine sanction.
The Apology, Socrates's defense before his judges, is rather a feeble production, and in the general opinion of modern critics is not a genuine work of Xenophon, but belongs to a much later period.
Xenophon was a man of great personal beauty and considerable intellectual gifts; but he was of too practical a nature to take an interest in abstruse philosophical speculation. His dislike of the democracy of Athens induced such lack of patriotism that he even fought on the side of Sparta against his own country. In religious matters he was narrowminded, a believer in the efficacy of sacrifice and in the prophetic art. His plain and simple style, which at times becomes wearisome, was greatly admired and procured him many imitators.
The editions of Xenophon's works, both complete and of separate portions, are very numerous, especially of the Anabasis; only a selection can be given here.
Editio princeps (1516, incomplete); J.G. Schneider (17901849); G. Sauppe
(186566); L. Dindorf (1875); E. C. Marchant (p~oo , in the Clarendon press
Scriptorum Classicorum Bibliotheca). ANABASIS: R. Kuhner (1852); J. F.
Macmichael (1883); F. Vollbrecht (1887); A. Pretor (1888); C .W. Kruger and W.
Pokel (1888); W.W. Goodwin and J. W. White (i.iv., 1894). CYROPAEDIA: G. M.
Gorham (1870); L. Breitenbach (1875); A. Goodwin (vi.viii., 1880); F. Hertlein
and W. Nitsche (1886);H. A. Holden (188790). HELLENICA :L. Breitenbach
(187484); R. Buchsenschutz (1880-91); J. I. Manatt
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