cumered
troopsof
Pizarro
ralliedonce‘
moreatthemum!
of
the
trumpe!
in
the
blrizitlysquareof
Cajrmxorca.
...
/Alalzuzzlpa,’
wasreverv
enrerlusmorethana
human.Hewasnot
merely
thehead
of
the
mite,
butthe
[mint
to
whichailitsErt5fiIl1£§0!LV
can
verged
astoa
commoncr.'n1z*r—zIz(e
/((€}'.S‘l(Jfl€of!/ze
politi-
cal
fabric
whiclzmust
flail!
[0
pieces‘by
itsown
weight
whenrho!was
withdrawn.Soit
fared
onthe
[execution]of
Amhuulpa.
flisdeath
not
only
left
thethrone
vacam.
without
any
certain
soon-xsor,
bu:
themzmner
ofir
announcer!Iothe
Peruvian
meople
that
Ithand
stronger
than
that
of
theirIncashurl
now
seizedthe
.w:ep:‘£'n",
andthatthe
dynasty
o/"the
Children
o/‘the
Sunhad
passed
awayforever.
meCOh'(‘)Uk;S'I'orPERU.
WILLIAMll.
PR1-_’S(‘0‘I'T,
l 847
360 LAW 42
excelled
above
allotherAtheniansinhis
intelligence,
hismusical
skills,
andhisrhetoricalabilities,ItwasDamonwhohadtrainedPericlesinthe
artsof
ruling.
But
he,too,
suffered
ostracism,
forhis
superior
airsandhis
insulting
mannertowardthecommonersstirred
up
toomuchresentment.
Towardtheendofthe
century
therelivedaman
named
Hyperbolus.
Mostwritersof
the
timedescribehimasthe
city’s
mostworthlesscitizen:
Hedidnotcarewhat
anyonethought
of
him,
andslanderedwhomeverhe
disliked.Heamused
some,
butirritated
many
more.In 417
B.C.,
Hyperbo-
lussawan
opportunity
tostir
upaugeragainst
thetwo
leadingpoliticians
ofthe
time,
AlcibiadesandNicias.He
hoped
thatoneofthe
twowouldbe
ostracizedandthathewouldrise inthatman’s
place.
His
campaign
seemed
likely
tosucceed:TheAtheniansdislikedAlcibiades’
flamboyant
andcarefree
lifestyle,
andwere
wary
ofNicias’wealth andaloofness.
They
seemedcertaintoostracizeoneortheother.ButAlcibiadesand
Nicias,
althoughthey
wereotherwise
enemies,
pooled
theirresourcesand
managed
toturn
the
ostracismon
Hyperbolus
instead. Hisobnoxious-
ness,
theyargued,
could
only
beterminated
by
banishment.
Earlier sufferersofostracismhad
been
formidable,
powerful
men.
Hyperbolus,
however,
wasalow
buffoon,
andwithhis
banishment
the
Athenians
feltthatostracismhadbeen
degraded.
Andso
they
endedthe
practice
thatfor
nearly
ahundred
years
hadbeenoneofthe
keys
to
keep-
ing
the
peace
withinAthens.
Interpretation
TheancientAthenians
hadsocialinstinctsunknown
toclay—thepassage
ofcenturieshasbluntedthem.Citizensinthetruesenseofthe
word,
the
Athenianssensedthe
dangersposed
by
asocial
behavior,
andsawhow
suchbehavioroften
disguises
itselfinotherforms:theholier-tharythouat-
titude
that
silently
seeksto
impose
itsstandardson
others;
overweening
ambitionatthe
expense
ofthecommon
good;
the
flaunting
of
superiority;
quietscheming;
terminalobnoxiousness.Someofthesebehaviorswould
eat
away
atthe
city’s
cohesion
bycreating
factionsand
sowing
dissension,
otherswouldruinthedemocratic
spiritbymaking
thecommoncitizen
feelinferiorand
envious.TheAtheniansdid
not
try
toreeducate
people
whoactedinthese
ways,
ortoabsorbthemsomehowintothe
group,
orto
impose
aviolent
punishment
thatwould
only
createother
problems.
The
solutionwas
quick
andeffective:Getridofthem.
Within
anygroup,
trouble
can
mostoftenbetraced
toa
single
source,
the
unhappy,chronically
dissatisfiedonewhowill
always
stir
up
dissen-
sionandinfectthe
group
withhisorherillease.Before
you
knowwhathit
you
thedissatisfaction
spreads.
Actbeforeitbecomes
impossible
todisen-
tangle
onestrandof
misery
from
another,
ortoseehowthewhole
thing
started.
First,
recognize
troublemakers
by
their
overbearingpresence,
or
by
their
complaining
nature.Once
you
spot
themdonot
try
toreform
themor
appease
them-—thatwill
only
make
things
worse.Donotattack
them,
whether
directly
or
indirectly,
for
they
are
poisonous
innatureand