filling up their wrinkles and deformities, are less
to blame, because it is no great matter whether we
see them in their natural complexions; whereas these
make it their business to deceive not our sight only
but our judgments, and to adulterate and corrupt the
very essence of things. The republics that have
maintained themselves in a regular and well-modelled
government, such as those of Lacedaemon and Crete,
had orators in no very great esteem. Aristo wisely
defined rhetoric to be “a science to persuade
the people;” Socrates and Plato “an art
to flatter and deceive.” And those who
deny it in the general description, verify it throughout
in their precepts. The Mohammedans will not
suffer their children to be instructed in it, as being
useless, and the Athenians, perceiving of how pernicious
consequence the practice of it was, it being in their
city of universal esteem, ordered the principal part,
which is to move the affections, with their exordiums
and perorations, to be taken away. ’Tis
an engine invented to manage and govern a disorderly
and tumultuous rabble, and that never is made use of,
but like physic to the sick, in a discomposed state.
In those where the vulgar or the ignorant, or both
together, have been all-powerful and able to give
the law, as in those of Athens, Rhodes, and Rome, and
where the public affairs have been in a continual
tempest of commotion, to such places have the orators
always repaired. And in truth, we shall find
few persons in those republics who have pushed their
fortunes to any great degree of eminence without the
assistance of eloquence.
Pompey, Caesar, Crassus, Lucullus, Lentulus, Metellus,
thence took their chiefest spring, to mount to that
degree of authority at which they at last arrived,
making it of greater use to them than arms, contrary
to the opinion of better times; for, L. Volumnius
speaking publicly in favour of the election of Q.
Fabius and Pub. Decius, to the consular dignity:
“These are men,” said he, “born for
war and great in execution; in the combat of the tongue
altogether wanting; spirits truly consular. The
subtle, eloquent, and learned are only good for the
city, to make praetors of, to administer justice.”—[Livy,
x. 22.]
Eloquence most flourished at Rome when the public
affairs were in the worst condition and most disquieted
with intestine commotions; as a free and untilled
soil bears the worst weeds. By which it should
seem that a monarchical government has less need of
it than any other: for the stupidity and facility
natural to the common people, and that render them
subject to be turned and twined and, led by the ears
by this charming harmony of words, without weighing
or considering the truth and reality of things by
the force of reason: this facility, I say, is
not easily found in a single person, and it is also
more easy by good education and advice to secure him
from the impression of this poison. There was
never any famous orator known to come out of Persia
or Macedon.