So much for the types of character that distinguish youth, old
age, and the prime of life. We will now turn to those Gifts of Fortune
by which human character is affected. First let us consider Good
Birth. Its effect on character is to make those who have it more
ambitious; it is the way of all men who have something to start with
to add to the pile, and good birth implies ancestral distinction.
The well-born man will look down even on those who are as good as
his own ancestors, because any far-off distinction is greater than the
same thing close to us, and better to boast about. Being well-born,
which means coming of a fine stock, must be distinguished from
nobility, which means being true to the family nature -- a quality not
usually found in the well-born, most of whom are poor creatures. In
the generations of men as in the fruits of the earth, there is a
varying yield; now and then, where the stock is good, exceptional
men are produced for a while, and then decadence sets in. A clever
stock will degenerate towards the insane type of character, like the
descendants of Alcibiades or of the elder Dionysius; a steady stock
towards the fatuous and torpid type, like the descendants of Cimon,
Pericles, and Socrates.
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