20. But the converse must also be observed. For in friendship and
relationship, just as those who possess any superiority must put
themselves on an equal footing with those who are less fortunate,
so these latter must not be annoyed at being surpassed in genius,
fortune, or rank. But most people of that sort are forever either
grumbling at something, or harping on their claims; and especially
if they consider that they have services of their own to allege
involving zeal and friendship and some trouble to themselves.
People who are always bringing up their services are a nuisance.
The recipient ought to remember them; the performer should never
mention them. In the case of friends, then, as the superior are
bound to descend, so are they bound in a certain sense to raise
those below them. For there are people who make their friendship
disagreeable by imagining themselves undervalued. This generally
happens only to those who think that they deserve to be so; and
they ought to be shewn by deeds as well as by words the
groundlessness of their opinion. Now the measure of your benefits
should he in the first place your own power to bestow, and in the
second place the capacity to bear them on the part of him on whom
you are bestowing affection and help. For, however great your
personal prestige may be, you cannot raise all your friends to the
highest offices of the State. For instance, Scipio was able to make
Publius Rupilius consul, but not his brother Lucius. But granting
that you can give anyone anything you choose, you must have a
care that it does not prove to be beyond his powers. As a general
rule, we must wait to make up our mind about friendships till
men's characters and years have arrived at their full strength and
development. People must not, for instance, regard as fast friends
all whom in their youthful enthusiasm for hunting or football they
liked for having the same tastes. By that rule, if it were a mere
question of time, no one would have such claims on our affections
as nurses and slave-tutors. Not that they are to be neglected, but
they stand on a different ground. It is only these mature
friendships that can be permanent. For difference of character
leads to difference of aims, and the result of such diversity is to
estrange friends. The sole reason, for instance, which prevents
good men from making friends with bad, or bad with good, is that
the divergence of their characters and aims is the greatest possible.
Another good rule in friendship is this: do not let an excessive
affection hinder the highest interests of your friends. This very
often happens. I will go again to the region of fable for an
instance. Neoptolemus could never have taken Troy if he had
been willing to listen to Lycomedes, who had brought him up, and
with many tears tried to prevent his going there. Again, it often
happens that important business makes it necessary to part from
friends: the man who tries to baulk it, because he thinks that he
cannot endure the separation, is of a weak and effeminate nature,
and on that very account makes but a poor friend. There are, of
course, limits to what you ought to expect from a friend and to
what you should allow him to demand of you. And these you must
take into calculation in every case.
21. Again, there is such a disaster, so to speak, as having to break
off friendship. And sometimes it is one we cannot avoid. For at
this point the stream of our discourse is leaving the intimacies of
the wise and touching on the friendship of ordinary people. It will
happen at times that an outbreak of vicious conduct affects either a
man's friends themselves or strangers, yet the discredit falls on the
friends. In such cases friendships should be allowed to die out
gradually by an intermission of intercourse. They should, as I have
been told that Cato used to say, rather be unstitched than torn in
twain; unless, indeed, the injurious conduct be of so violent and
outrageous a nature as to make an instant breach and separation
the only possible course consistent with honour and rectitude.
Again, if a change in character and aim takes place, as often
happens, or if party politics produces an alienation of feeling (I am
now speaking, as I said a short time ago, of ordinary friendships,
not of those of the wise), we shall have to be on our guard against
appearing to embark upon active enmity while we only mean to
resign a friendship. For there can be nothing more discreditable
than to be at open war with a man with whom you have been
intimate. Scipio, as you are aware, had abandoned his friendship
for Quintus Pompeius on my account; and again, from differences
of opinion in politics, he became estranged from my colleague
Metellus. In both cases he acted with dignity and moderation,
shewing that he was offended indeed, but without rancour.
Our first object, then, should be to prevent a breach; our second, to
secure that, if it does occur, our friendship should seem to have
died a natural rather than a violent death. Next, we should take
care that friendship is not converted into active hostility, from
which flow personal quarrels, abusive language, and angry
recriminations. These last, however, provided that they do not pass
all reasonable limits of forbearance, we ought to put up with, and,
in compliment to an old friendship, allow the party that inflicts the
injury, not the one that submits to it, to be in the wrong. Generally
speaking, there is but one way of securing and providing oneself
against faults and inconveniences of this sort-not to be too hasty in
bestowing our affection, and not to bestow it at all on unworthy
objects.
Now, by "worthy of friendship" I mean those who have in
themselves the qualities which attract affection. This sort of man is
rare; and indeed all excellent things are rare; and nothing in the
world is so hard to find as a thing entirely and completely perfect
of its kind. But most people not only recognize nothing as good in
our life unless it is profitable, but look upon friends as so much
stock, caring most for those by whom they hope to make most
profit. Accordingly they never possess that most beautiful and
most spontaneous friendship which must be sought solely for itself
without any ulterior object. They fail also to learn from their own
feelings the nature and the strength of friendship. For every one
loves himself, not for any reward which such love may bring, but
because he is dear to himself independently of anything else. But
unless this feeling is transferred to another, what a real friend is
will never be revealed; for he is, as it were, a second self. But if
we find these two instincts shewing themselves in animals,-
whether of the air or the sea or the land, whether wild or
tame,-first, a love of self, which in fact is born in everything that
lives alike; and, secondly, an eagerness to fiud and attach
themselves to other creatures of their own kind; and if this natural
action is accompanied by desire and by something resembling
human love, how much more must this be the case in man by the
law of his nature? For man not only loves himself, but seeks
another whose spirit he may so blend with his own as almost to
make one being of two.
22. But most people unreasonably, not to speak of modesty, want
such a friend as they are unable to be themselves, and expect from
their friends what they do not themselves give. The fair course is
first to be good yourself, and then to look out for another of like
character. It is between such that the stability in friendship of
which we have been talking can be secured; when, that is to say,
men who are united by affection learn, first of all, to rule those
passions which enslave others, and in the next place to take delight
in fair and equitable conduct, to bear each other's burdens, never to
ask each other for anything inconsistent with virtue and rectitude,
and not only to serve and love but also to respect each other. I say
"respect"; for if respect is gone, friendship has lost its brightest
jewel. And this shows the mistake of those who imagine that
friendship gives a privilege to licentiousness and sin. Nature has
given us friendship as the handmaid of virtue, not as a partner in
guilt: to the end that virtue, being powerless when isolated to reach
the highest objects, might succeed in doing so in union and
partnership with another. Those who enjoy in the present, or have
enjoyed in the past, or are destined to enjoy in the future such a
partnership as this, must be considered to have secured the most
excellent and auspicious combination for
ON FRIENDSHIP
reaching nature's highest good. This is the partnership, I say,
which combines moral rectitude, fame, peace of mind, serenity: all
that men think desirable because with them life is happy, but
without them cannot be so. This being our best and highest object,
we must, if we desire to attain it, devote ourselves to virtue; for
without virtue we can obtain neither friendship nor anything else
desirable. In fact, if virtue be neglected, those who imagine
themselves to possess friends will find out their error as soon as
some grave disaster forces them to make trial of them. Wherefore,
I must again and again repeat, you must satisfy your judgment
before engaging your affections: not love first and judge
afterwards. We suffer from carelessness in many of our
undertakings: in none more than in selecting and cultivating our
friends. We put the cart before the horse, and shut the stable door
when the steed is stolen, in defiance of the old proverb. For,
having mutually involved ourselves in a long-standing intimacy or
by actual obligations, all on a sudden some cause of offence arises
and we break off our friendships in full career.
23.It is this that makes such carelessness in a matter of supreme
importance all the more worthy of blame. I say "supreme
importance," because friendship is the one thing about the utility
of which everybody with one accord is agreed. That is not the case
in regard even to virtue itself; for many people speak slightingly of
virtue as though it were mere puffing and self-glorification. Nor is
it the case with riches. Many look down on riches, being content
with a little and taking pleasure in poor fare and dress, And as to
the political offices for which some have a burning desire
-how many entertain such a contempt for them as to think nothing
in the world more empty and trivial!
And so on with the rest; things desirable in the eyes of some are
regarded by very many as worthless. But of friendship all think
alike to a man, whether those have devoted themselves to politics,
or those who delight in science and philosophy, or those who
follow a private way of life and care for nothing but their own
business, or those lastly who have given themselves body and soul
to sensuality-they all think, I say, that without friendship life is no
life, if they want some part of it, at any rate, to be noble. For
friendship, in one way or another, penetrates into the lives of us
all, and suffers no career to be entirely free from its influence.
Though a man be of so churlish and unsociable a nature as to
loathe and shun the company of mankind, as we are told was the
case with a certain Timon at Athens, yet even he cannot refrain
from seeking some one in whose hearing he may disgorge the
venom of his bitter temper. We should see this most clearly, if it
were possible that some god should carry us away from these
haunts of men, and place us some-where in perfect solitude, and
then should supply us in abundance with everything necessary to
our nature, and yet take from us entirely the opportunity of looking
upon a human being. Who could steel himself to endure such a
life? Who would not lose in his loneliness the zest for all
pleasures? And indeed this is the point of the observation of, I
think, Archytas of Tarentum. I have it third hand; men who were
my seniors told me that their seniors had told them. It was this: "If
a man could ascend to heaven and get a clear view of the natural
order of the universe, and the beauty of the heavenly bodies, that
wonderful spectacle would give him small pleasure, though
nothing could be conceived more delightful if he had but had some
one to whom to tell what he had seen." So true it is that nature
abhors isolation, and ever leans upon some-thing as a stay and
support; and this is found in its most pleasing form in our closest
friend.
24. But though Nature also declares by so many indications what her
wish and object and desire is, we yet in a manner turn a deaf ear
and will not hear her warnings. The intercourse between friends is
varied and complex, and it must often happen that causes of
suspicion and offence arise, which a wise man will sometimes
avoid, at other times remove, at others treat with indulgence. The
one possible cause of offence that must be faced is when the
interests of your friend and your own sincerity are at stake. For
instance, it often happens that friends need remonstrance and even
reproof. When these are administered in a kindly spirit they ought
to be taken in good part. But somehow or other there is truth in
what my friend Terence says in his _Andria_:
Compliance gets us friends, plain speaking hate.
Plain speaking is a cause of trouble, if the result of It is
resentment, which is poison of friendship; but compliance is really
the cause of much more trouble, because by indulging his faults it
lets a friend plunge into headlong ruin. But the man who is most to
blame is he who resents plain speaking and allows flattery to egg
him on to his ruin. On this point, then, from first to last there is
need of deliberation and care. If we remonstrate, it should be
without bitterness; if we reprove, there should be no word of
insult. In the matter of compliance (for I am glad to adopt
Terence's word), though there should be every courtesy, yet that
base kind which assists a man in vice should be far from us, for it
is unworthy of a free-born man, to say nothing of a friend. It is one
thing to live with a tyrant, another with a friend. But if a man's ears
are so closed to plain speaking that be cannot hear to hear the truth
from a friend, we may give him "p in despair. This remark of
Cato's, as so many of his did, shews great acuteness: "There are
people who owe more to bitter enemies than to apparently pleasant
friends: the former often speak the truth, the latter never." Besides,
it is a strange paradox that the recipients of advice should feel no
annoyance where they ought to feel it, and yet feel so much where
they ought not. They are not at all vexed at having committed a
fault, but very angry at being reproved for it. On the contrary, they
ought to be grieved at the crime and glad of the correction.
25. Well, then, if it is true that to give and receive advice
-the former with freedom and yet without bitterness, the latter with
patience and without irritation-is peculiarly appropriate to genuine
friendship, it is no less true that there can be nothing more utterly
subversive of friendship than flattery, adulation, and base
compliance. I use as many terms as possible to brand this vice of
light-minded, untrustworthy men, whose sole object in speaking is
to please with-out any regard to truth. In everything false pretence
is bad. for it suspends and vitiates our power of discerning the
truth. But to nothing it is so hostile as to friendship; for it destroys
that frankness without which friendship is an empty name. For the
essence of friendship being that two minds become as one, how
can that ever take place if the mind of each of the separate parties
to it is not single and uniform, but variable, changeable, and
complex? Can anything be so pliable, so wavering, as the mind of
a man whose attitude depends not only on another's feeling and
wish, but on his very looks and nods?
If one says "No," I answer "No" ; if "Yes," I answer "Yes."
In fine, I've laid this task upon myself
To echo all that's said-
to quote my old friend Terence again. But he puts these words
into the mouth of a Gnatho. To admit such a man into one's
intimacy at all is a sign of folly. But there are many people like
Gnatho, and it is when they are superior either in position or
fortune or reputation that their flatteries become mischievous, the
weight of their position making up for the lightness of their
character. But if we only take reasonable care, it is as easy to
separate and distinguish a genuine from a specious friend as
anything else that is coloured and artificial from what is sincere
and genuine. A public assembly, though composed of men of the
smallest possible culture, nevertheless will see clearly the
difference between a mere demagogue (that is, a flatterer and
untrustworthy citizen) and a man of principle, standing, and
solidity. It was by this kind of flattering language that Gaius
Papirius the other day endeavoured to tickle the ears of the
assembled people, when proposing his law to make the tribunes
re-eligible. I spoke against it. But I will leave the personal
question. I prefer speaking of Scipio. Good heavens! how
impressive his speech was, what a majesty there was in it! You
would have pronounced him, without hesitation, to be no mere
henchman of the Roman people, but their leader. However, you
were there, and moreover have the speech in your hands. The
result was that a law meant to please the people was by the
people's votes rejected. Once more to refer to myself, you
remember how apparently popular was the law proposed by Gaius
Licinius Crassus "about the election to the College of Priests" in
the consulship of Quintus Maximus, Scipio's brother, and Lucius
Mancinus. For the power of filling up their own vacancies on the
part of the colleges was by this proposal to be transferred to the
people. It was this man, by the way, who began the practice of
turning towards the forum when addressing the people. In spite of
this, however, upon my speaking on the conservative side, religion
gained an easy victory over his
plausible speech. This took place in my praetorship, five years
before I was elected consul, which shows that the cause was
successfully maintained more by the merits of the case than by the
prestige of the highest office.
26. Now, if on a stage, such as a public assembly essentially is,
where there is the amplest room for fiction and half-truths, truth
nevertheless prevails if it be but fairly laid open and brought into
the light of day, what ought to happen in the case of friendship,
which rests entirely on truthfulness? Friendship, in which, unless
you both see and show an open breast, to use a common
expression, you can neither trust nor be certain of anything-no, not
even of mutual affection, since you cannot be sure of its sincerity.
However, this flattery, injurious as it is, can hurt no one but the
man who takes it in and likes it. And it follows that the man to
open his ears widest to flatterers is he who first flatters himself and
is fondest of himself. I grant you that Virtue naturally loves
herself; for she knows herself and perceives how worthy of love
she is. But I am not now speaking of absolute virtue, but of the
belief men have that they possess virtue. The fact is that fewer
people are endowed with virtue than wish to be thought to be so. It
is such people that take delight in flattery. When they are
addressed in language expressly adapted to flatter their vanity, they
look upon such empty persiflage as a testimony to the truth of their
own praises. It is not then properly friendship at all when the one
will not listen to the truth, and the other is prepared to lie. Nor
would the servility of parasites in comedy have seemed humorous
to us had there been no such things as braggart captains. "Is
Thais really much obliged to me?" It would have been quite
enough to answer "Much," but he must needs say "Immensely."
Your servile flatterer always exaggerates what his victim wishes to
be put strongly. Wherefore, though it is with those who catch at
and invite it that this flattering falsehood is especially powerful,
yet men even of solider and steadier character must be warned tn
be on the watch against being taken in by cunningly disguised
flattery. An open flatterer any one can detect, unless he is an
absolute fool the covert insinuation of the cunning and the sly is
what we have to be studiously on our guard against. His detection
is not by any means the easiest thing in the world, for he often
covers his servility under the guise of contradiction, and flatters by
pretending to dispute, and then at last giving in and allowing
himself to be beaten, that the person hoodwinked may think
himself to have been the clearer-sighted. Now what can be more
degrading than to be thus hoodwinked? You must be on your guard
against this happening to you, like the man in the _Heiress_:
How have I been befooled! no drivelling dotards
On any stage were e'er so played upon.
For even on the stage we have no grosser representation of folly
than that of short-sighted and credulous old men. But somehow or
other I have strayed away from the friendship of the perfect, that is
of the "wise" (meaning, of course, such "wisdom" as human nature
is capable of), to the subject of vulgar, unsubstantial friendships.
Let us then return to our original theme, and at length bring that,
too, to a conclusion.
27. Well, then, Fannius and Mucius, I repeat what I said before. It
is virtue, virtue, which both creates and preserves friendship. On it
depends harmony of interest, permanence, fidelity. When Virtue
has reared her head and shewn the light of her countenance, and
seen and recognised the same light in another, she gravitates
towards it, and in her turn welcomes that which the other has to
shew; and from it springs up a flame which you may call love or
friendship as you please. Both words are from the same root in
Latin; and love is just the cleaving to him whom you love without
the prompting of need or any view to advantage-though this latter
blossoms spontaneously on friendship, little as you may have
looked for it. It is with such warmth of feeling that I cherished
Lucius Paulus, Marcus Cato, Galus Gallus, Publius Nasica,
Tiberius Gracchus, my dear Scipio's father-in-law. It shines with
even greater warmth when men are of the same age, as in the case
of Scipio and Lucius Furius, Publius Rupilius, Spurius Mummius,
and myself. _En revanche_, in my old age I find comfort in the
affection of young men, as in the case of yourselves and Quintus
Tubero: nay more, I delight in the intimacy of such a very young
man as Publius Rutilius and Aulus Verginius. And since the law of
our nature and of our life is that a new generation is for ever
springing up, the most desirable thing is that along with your
contemporaries, with whom you started in the race, you may also
teach what is to us the goal. But in view of the in-stability and
perishableness of mortal things, we should be continually on the
look-out for some to love and by whom to be loved; for if we lose
affection and kindliness from our life, we lose all that gives it
charm. For me, indeed, though torn away by a sudden stroke,
Scipio still lives and ever wilt live. For it was the virtue of the man
that I loved, and that has not suffered death. And it is not my eyes
only, because I had all my life a personal experience of it, that
never lose sight of it: it will shine to posterity also with undimmed
glory. No one will ever cherish a nobler ambition or a loftier hope
without thinking his memory and his image the best to put before
his eyes. I declare that of all the blessings which either fortune or
nature has bestowed upon me I know none to compare with
Scipio's friendship. In it I found sympathy in public, counsel in
private business; in it too a means of spending my leisure with
unalloyed delight. Never, to the best of my knowledge, did I
offend him even in the most trivial point; never did I hear a word
from him I could have wished unsaid. We had one house, one
table, one style of living; and not only were we together on foreign
service, but in our tours also and country sojourns. Why speak of
our eagerness to be ever gaining some knowledge, to be ever
learning something, on which we spent all our leisure hours far
from the gaze of the world? If the recollection and memory of
these things had perished with the man, I could not possibly have
endured the regret for one so closely united with me in life and
affection. But these things have not perished; they are rather fed
and strengthened by reflexion and memory. Even supposing me to
have been entirely bereft of them, still my time of life of itself
brings me no small consolation: for I cannot have much longer
now to bear this regret; and everything that is brief ought to be
endurable, however severe.
This is all I had to say on friendship. One piece of advice on
parting. Make up your minds to this. Virtue (without which
friendship is impossible) is first; but next to it, and to it alone, the
greatest of all things is Friendship.
De Amicitia Sections
1,
2,
3,
4,
5,
6,
7,
8,
9,
10,
11,
12,
13,
14,
15,
16,
17,
18,
19,
20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27
Primary Text Index Cicero Texts