[Athens: Its Rise and Fall<br> Complete by Edward Bulwer-Lytton]@TWC D-Link book
Athens: Its Rise and Fall
Complete

CHAPTER V
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124, and the authorities he quotes.
[136] Aristot.Pol., lib.ii., c.

9.
[137] Idem.
[138] These remarks on the democratic and representative nature of the ephoralty are only to be applied to it in connexion with the Spartan people.

It must be remembered that the ephors represented the will of that dominant class, and not of the Laconians or Perioeci, who made the bulk of the non-enslaved population; and the democracy of their constitution was therefore but the democracy of an oligarchy.
[139] Machiavel (Discourses on the first Decade of Livy, b.i., c.
vi.), attributes the duration of the Spartan government to two main causes--first, the fewness of the body to be governed, allowing fewness in the governors; and secondly, the prevention of all the changes and corruption which the admission of strangers would have occasioned.

He proceeds then to show that for the long duration of a constitution the people should be few in number, and all popular impulse and innovation checked; yet that, for the splendour and greatness of a state, not only population should be encouraged, but even political ferment and agitation be leniently regarded.

Sparta is his model for duration, republican Rome for progress and empire.


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