32.20
The
next day they were called together again. When, in accordance with Greek
usage, the usher announced that the magistrates gave permission to speak to
any one who wished to lay his views before the council, there was a long
silence, each looking for some one else to speak. Nor was this surprising,
when men who had been turning over in their minds proposals flatly opposed
to each other until their brains had come to a standstill, were still further
bewildered by speeches lasting the whole day through, in which the
difficulties on both sides were set forth in tones of warning. At last,
Aristaenus, the president, determined not to adjourn the council without
discussion, said: "Where, Achaeans, are those lively disputes which go on at
your dinner-tables and at the street corners, in which whenever Philip or the
Romans are mentioned you can scarcely keep your hands off each other?
Now, in a council convened for this special purpose, when you have heard
the representatives of both sides, when the magistrates submit the question
to discussion, when the usher invites you to express your views, you have
become dumb. If care for the common safety fails to do so, cannot the party
spirit which makes you take one side or the other, extort a word from any
one? especially as no one is so dense as not to see that this is the moment,
before any decree is passed, for speaking and advocating the course which
commends itself to any one as the best. When a decree has once been made,
every one will have to uphold it as a good and salutary measure, even those
who previously opposed it." This appeal from the president not only failed to
induce a single speaker to come forward, it did not even call forth a single
cheer or murmur in that great assembly, where so many States were
represented.