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[9]
All the considerations which I have mentioned above, however, I consider of less
importance than my conduct from first to last and every day in public life, in which I
showed myself in action to be a statesman, never encouraging any nursing of a grudge or a
feud or the grasping for unfair advantage, whether shared or for myself, never preferring
false charges against either citizen or alien, never being over-clever to work in secret
against your interests but always working for them, if occasion should arise, and above
board, subject to public approval.
[10]
The older men would
know—and in all fairness you ought to inform the younger ones—of the
hearing granted Python1 of Byzantium before the Assembly when he arrived with
the envoys from the Greeks, expecting to show that the city was acting unjustly, but went
away with the tables turned against him after I, alone of those who spoke on that
occasion, had brought out the rights of the matter in your defence. I forbear to mention
all the embassies upon which I served in support of your interests, in which you were
never worsted even in a single instance;
[11]
for I shaped my
policy, men of Athens, not with an eye to
helping you get the better of one another, nor whetting the State against itself, but
furthering measures from which I thought a reputation for magnanimity would redound to
you. With such aspirations you should all be delighted, and especially the younger men,
not looking for someone who will always play the lackey to win your favour in his public
conduct—for of this type there will never be a dearth—but for one who,
actuated by loyalty, will even rebuke you for your errors of judgement.
1 Python, pupil of Isocrates and a presumptuous orator headed a deputation of all the Allies of Philip when they come to Athens in 343 B.C. to accuse the people of unjust conduct. See Dem. 7.20-23, Dem. 18.136, Plut. Dem. 9, and Lucian Encomium 32.