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The Life of Alcibiades

Page 7

by Jacqueline de Romilly


  was then “forced to lay his head on Socrates’ knee and weep.” 3 Alcibiades

  weeps with regret because he fears that he lacks the necessary preparation

  for the career he desires.

  His discouragement, if it ever really existed, was not to last long. But at

  the threshold of a political career full of great hopes and great disappoint-

  ments, it offers a brief hint of what might have been.

  3. We have the text from the rhetorician Aelius Aristides.

  34 First

  Interlude

  What might have been never was. Alcibiades’s entry into politics, with

  its long train of scandals, was where the waters divided; the current was

  henceforth to carry Alcibiades to his fate, and far from the lessons of his

  teacher.

  Now we must leave Socrates and Plato. The historians take the stage,

  primarily Thucydides. Alcibiades begins to act.

  3

  Political Debut

  The Argive Alliance

  The fi rst mention of Alcibiades in Thucydides’s work (5.43)—in history, in

  other words—refers to the year 420 BCE. Thucydides’s introduction lacks

  the personal charm found in Plato, but it goes straight to the heart of the

  man’s character.

  Leaving aside, for the moment, the context for this introduction, the

  following conveys the spirit of the passage.

  “Foremost amongst these was Alcibiades son of Clinias, a man still

  young in years for any other Hellenic city, distinguished by the splendor of

  his ancestry. Alcibiades thought the Argive alliance really preferable, not

  that personal pique had not also a great deal to do with his opposition”

  (5.43.2). The explanation, both clear and concise, continues, but what we

  retain from this passage is the characteristic pride and ambition, conveyed

  from the very fi rst mention of his name, and the emergence of two kinds

  of themes, the rational ones, and the self-centered ones. Compounding

  the problem, it is the latter that are dominant, the former being little more

  than a kind of concession or acknowledgment of fortuitous coincidence.

  36 Chapter

  3

  The word “ambition” is a highly charged one when we recall

  Thucydides’s assessment of Pericles, in which he describes Pericles’s suc-

  cessors as being more or less equals: “And each grasping at supremacy,

  they ended by committing even the conduct of state affairs to the whim of

  the multitude” (2.65.10).

  This juxtaposition of contrasting motives—the future of Athens ver-

  sus the promotion of self-interest—is found throughout the work of

  Thucydides whenever Alcibiades is involved: in the Sicilian expedition

  and later during the action in Asia Minor. We will have occasion to return

  to this theme: Alcibiades acted solely out of self-interest. This is a point

  that has already been made emphatically, and all that follows will serve

  to repeat it.

  Let me add that Plutarch himself (who obviously had read Thucydides)

  also adopts this interpretation. After he refers to Alcibiades’s messy pri-

  vate life, he states: “Nevertheless, it was actually by pandering to his am-

  bitious longing for recognition that his corrupters set him prematurely on

  the road of high endeavor; they convinced him that as soon as he took up

  politics, he would not merely eclipse all the other military commanders

  and popular leaders, but would gain more power and prestige among the

  Greeks than even Pericles enjoyed” ( Life of Alcibiades 6.4).

  Once the subject of politics was brought up, all the fl aws and insults

  were erased as compared with the ambition that would lead him to the

  pinnacle of success and the depths of disaster.

  How would he use that ambition? And to what purpose?

  First, he had to strengthen his position in Athens and take power. How

  does one do that?

  Athens functioned as a direct democracy. All citizens had the right to

  speak in the Assembly. For someone from one of the great families, like

  Alcibiades, this was particularly easy and normal. He had to do it. We

  know that he spoke up to offer a gift of money to the city (on the occa-

  sion when he released his quail): he was applauded and earned popular

  approval. We also know that he supported Cleon’s effort that increased

  the tribute paid by the cities of the empire.

  But what could be expected to result from these endeavors? If one re-

  ally wanted to play a role, he had to hold an offi ce. It should be remem-

  bered that all public offi ces in Athens were determined by lottery, were

  Political

  Debut 37

  collegial, and were nonrenewable. No democracy has ever taken such care

  to avoid control by individuals and the establishment (as is apparently the

  case today) of the “politics of personality.” No offi ce, no administrative

  position, could lead to the slightest infl uence.

  There was one exception. The highest leadership position, because it

  entailed military responsibility, was elective and renewable. These were

  the offi ces of the ten generals, elected by vote, once a year. There were

  also a few fi scal offi ces, but they had little weight. The generals were the

  true leaders of the democracy: Pericles had led the city as a general; he had

  been reelected to the post fi fteen times. Moreover, among the ten generals

  (each of whom had slightly different charges) one ranked higher than the

  others. As Thucydides often remarked, “Pericles was general, with nine

  others.” Often a famous or well-liked individual succeeded in getting his

  friends elected. But that was not always the case.

  Alcibiades intended to become general, and without delay. In fact, he

  was elected in the same year, 420 BCE.

  In these elections, as in the workings of the Assembly, nothing was

  done according to party affi liation: there were no parties. There were,

  however, political friendships, as well as dominant political tendencies.

  There were also, during the course of this democratic regime, secret ene-

  mies who remained loyal to the oligarchy and hoped to see it reestablished

  someday. These would come to play a particular role a few years hence.

  It was known that some people belonged to clubs, or hetaereiai, around

  important people. However, anyone who expected to participate in poli-

  tics was a supporter of democracy: the difference was mainly between

  extreme and moderate democrats. Alcibiades oscillated between these

  inclinations. Athenian politicians cared little about policies and general

  principles. Alcibiades, as his later conduct would prove, cared even less:

  he preferred opportunity to principle.

  In politics, personal rivalries were consequential. Thucydides knew this

  very well. At this time, many people talked about Nicias, who became a

  natural rival of Alcibiades. Their views about internal politics differed very

  little; but they took altogether opposing positions on the most important

  question of the day, namely, external relations and the war with Sparta.

  Athens and her allies had been at war with Sparta and the Pelopon-

  nesian League since 431. The war had begun under the rule of Pericles. It

 
dominated Alcibiades’s entire youth.

  Greece and the Aegean Sea

  Map 1.

  Political

  Debut 39

  It provided an opportunity to make his name and he did not let the

  opportunity escape him. In the Symposium he tells, or Plato has him tell,

  how he and Socrates had fought in the battle of Potideia, in the far north-

  ern Aegean, in Chalcidice. It was the year before the war with Sparta

  began. Alcibiades was wounded there and saved by Socrates. Alcibiades

  demanded that Socrates should receive a medal of honor, but because

  of Socrates’s entreaties, Alcibiades received it. The young aristocrat had

  served in that battle as a foot soldier. Just a little later, in 424, he fought

  at Delion, this time in the cavalry. Both battles enabled him to stand out.

  However, the war was more than an occasion of brilliant conduct for

  a young man like Alcibiades; it led him to make some critical decisions

  about the conduct of his affairs.

  It is important to see the entire Greek world then as divided into two

  blocks: on one side, Athens, with its democracy and maritime empire; on

  the other, Sparta, with its oligarchy and continental allies.

  The confl ict had grown slowly in the middle of the fi fth century, follow-

  ing the shared victory of the Greeks in the Persian Wars. Fifty years later,

  Athens had added to its authority by transforming allies into subjects, and

  by developing its fl eet thanks to the money they provided in the form of

  an annual tribute. The reputation of Pericles’s Athens, her power, the con-

  struction of the Acropolis, were all linked directly to this maritime empire.

  And the Peloponnesian War resulted, specifi cally, from the fear sown by

  her growing power in Sparta.

  The two sides had been fi ghting for ten years: on one side was Athens,

  ruling almost all the islands, and busy at home working to maintain the

  regime of the democracy. On the other side was Sparta, a city-state ruled

  by oligarchy, that led the Peloponnesian League and defended oligarchy

  as much as possible. The league included all the peoples of the Pelopon-

  nese except for two: the Argives and the Achaeans had been allies of

  both sides.

  For ten years these two blocs waged war throughout most of the Greek

  world. The Peloponnesians regularly invaded Attica, and the Athenians

  had won, in a pitched battle, a bridgehead at Pylos, in the Peloponnese.

  Both sides also engaged in the affairs of their respective allied cities where

  civil wars had broken out. The Athenians supported the partisans of de-

  mocracy and the Lacedaemonians supported oligarchies. Their involve-

  ment prolonged the confl icts and intensifi ed the violence.

  40 Chapter

  3

  Finally, on both sides, there arose a desire for peace, and in 421 peace

  was concluded. Both sides had reasons to want to come to terms. The

  Athenians had managed to capture a certain number of Spartiates at Pylos

  (that is, true Spartans, the elite, as opposed to Lacedaemonians, refer-

  ring to a wider population), while on their side, the Lacedaemonians had

  procured the defection of several allies of Athens, from the Chalcidian

  peninsula. Having already crushed several defections, Athens feared they

  would continue to grow. The peacemakers got to work in both cities: in

  Athens, it was Nicias, and historians today call the peace of 421 “the

  Peace of Nicias.”

  Nicias’s importance among the supporters of the peace would only en-

  courage Alcibiades to throw himself into opposition. From beginning to

  end throughout his career, he would stand for Athenian ambition and im-

  perialism; fi rst he opposed Sparta, but later he would take up other ideas

  for conquest, always opposing Nicias.

  Initially, he was able to exploit the fragility and ambiguities of the

  peace. These were real. Naturally there were issues of reciprocal restitu-

  tions, giving rise to arguments and delays; there were issues of the date

  and order of restitution. But the biggest complications arose from the un-

  happiness on the part of Sparta’s allies. Some had refused to vote for the

  peace. Moreover, the terms had allowed for possible modifi cations if they

  were agreeable to both Sparta and Athens; there was no mention here of

  the allies, and they took offense. 1 There were two main consequences of

  this: fi rst, it multiplied the delays and refusals of the restitutions, and sec-

  ond, they considered unifying against Sparta.

  That would have been a serious problem at any time; it was especially

  serious in 421, because of Argos.

  As has been noted, Argos had not joined the war with the Pelopon-

  nesian League; in 451 it had concluded a thirty-year peace agreement with

  Sparta, which was about to expire. It found itself free and could join either

  Athens or Sparta, or even play a role in combining around itself the Spar-

  tan allies who were not happy about the treaties.

  All eyes were now on Argos. After the conclusion of the peace, the Cor-

  inthians began negotiations with certain leaders of the city: Argos, they

  1. Thucydides 5.29.2.

  Political

  Debut 41

  told them, should “look after the safety of the Peloponnese.” To that end,

  Argos should announce that “every city that is independent and values

  its rights could, if it wished, ally with the Argives in a defensive pact.”

  And it should designate leaders empowered to negotiate with these cities.

  The Corinthians were hoping that many cities would rally out of hostility

  toward Sparta. 2

  What should Athens do? Nicias thought Athens should embrace peace

  and come to an agreement with Sparta. He had set an example by returning

  to Sparta its famous prisoners, those it had sought so strenuously. In doing

  so, he had brought on himself the anger of many Athenians. 3 For his part, Alcibiades took the other side. He declared, from the beginning, that Sparta

  “was not reliable.” It was seeking to take advantage of the treaty in order to

  be fi nished with Argos and to oppose Athens again. Once his course of ac-

  tion was fi xed, he would play the Argive alliance card with determination.

  The Argive alliance was a grand idea and could claim illustrious ante-

  cedents. Themistocles, when he was ostracized, took refuge in Argos at

  the beginning of the century. Perhaps infl uenced by him, Argos and Man-

  tinea became democracies. A little later, when the political alliance with

  Sparta had failed, Athens had turned to an alliance with Argos. This was

  an ally that could resist Sparta in the middle of the Peloponnese.

  However, turning to Argos was a choice fraught with consequences.

  Whereas Pericles had grasped the superiority of naval power, and whereas

  the Athenian tradition, ever since the Persian Wars and Themistocles, had

  been “to stick to the sea” (Thucydides 1.93.4), now comes Alcibiades

  seeking to gain a foothold in the Peloponnese. Going even further, he de-

  cides to “stick to the land” (Plutarch, Life of Alcibiades 15.) It represented

  a break with tradition, an innovation, a bold stroke.

  Plutarch adds that Alcibiades based his plan on the “o
ath of the

  ephebes,” which vowed to make the borders of Attica grain and crops,

  as if the agricultural lands belonged to them. It sounded good, but it was

  not true. The actual text of the “oath of the ephebes,” carved in stone,

  was discovered several decades ago; it says nothing of the kind. 4 Was this 2 . Thucydides 5.27.2.

  3 . 5.35.4.

  4 . See L. Robert, Études épigraphiques et philologiques (Bibliothèque de l’École des Hautes Études, 272), 296–307.

  42 Chapter

  3

  a problem of communication? An intentional misunderstanding on Al-

  cibiades’s part, always mindful of providing sources for his policies? Who

  knows? One thing only is certain: the Argive alliance, by rejecting the im-

  portant distinction between maritime and continental power, represented

  a new direction that demanded an aggressive propaganda campaign. Al-

  cibiades lost no time.

  The fi rst among the Spartan allies to manifest their discontent and to

  approach Argos were the cities of Mantinea and Elis. These cities had

  caused problems between Athens and Sparta over the restitutions required

  by the Peace of Nicias. This was Alcibiades’s opportunity.

  It was at this point that Thucydides named Alcibiades for the fi rst time

  and introduced him in the passage quoted at the beginning of this chapter.

  He did so for the very good reason that Alcibiades was just then beginning

  to make his diplomatic moves.

  Alcibiades had friends in various cities, particularly in Argos, and he

  sent a private message there inviting the people of Argos, Mantinea, and

  Elis to come as quickly as possible to Athens to conclude an alliance. The

  moment, he said, was right, and he himself would advance their cause

  with all his might. He convinced them.

  The people of Argos, persuaded by Alcibiades, bent to Athens’ side,

  telling themselves that “the longstanding friendship of a city like Athens,

  living like themselves in a democracy and possessing a powerful navy,

  would be on their side in the case of hostilities” (Thucydides 5.44.1). They

  sent their representatives: the business was going to work.

  Alcibiades’s entry into politics was thus both bold and resolute. It

  seemed he was bound to succeed. One will note that he had acted on his

  own and, thanks to his friends in Argos, very privately. Thucydides is

 

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