Why the Cyropaedia is so dull
¶ 1 Leave a comment on paragraph 1 0 This will be more of a provocation than a post. But it is a provocation that will I think be of relevance for those teaching the Cyropaedia anytime soon (a luxury I, alas, will not have). In 1993, Deborah Gera opened her fine book on the Cyropaedia with a decidedly unpromising sentence:
¶ 2 Leave a comment on paragraph 2 0 “Considered by all too many to be one of the most tedious books to have survived classical antiquity, Xenophon’s Cyropaedia is a complex, varied work” (D.
Gera 1993 Xenophon’s Cyropaedia. Oxford.).
¶ 3 Leave a comment on paragraph 3 0 Then there is the famous jibe by Gibbon—
¶ 4 Leave a comment on paragraph 4 0 “The Cyropaedia is vague and languid: the Anabasis is circumstantial and animated. Such is the eternal difference between fiction and truth.”
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(That’s found on 551n119, a note to volume II, chapter XXIV of
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As James Tatum notes, in 1761 the Cyropaedia was already becoming obscure enough that Sterne could joke on its length and irrelevance by having Tristram’s father compose his Tristrapaedia, the work that was born obsolete, as it was forever unsuccessfully playing catch-up with young Tristram himself (J.
¶ 7 Leave a comment on paragraph 7 0 In short, the Cyropaedia was long considered the sort of work that even classicists would gladly trade for a lost work by one of Xenophon’s contemporaries. (Oh, for a complete edition of the Oxyrhynchus historian . . . ) Since Tatum and Gera wrote—and indeed in some large part because of the fine work done by Tatum and Gera—the Cyropaedia has become rather more topical. But the question remains, I suppose, and will no doubt be relevant for our students. Why has the Cyropaedia so often been considered a dull piece of work? And why are we—and why should they—be interested in it despite its putative dullness?
¶ 8 Leave a comment on paragraph 8 6 Why do many find the Cyropaedia dull? It’s a long book. More importantly, I think, its protagonist—after his decidedly charming youth, which is far from dull—is so consistently successful that anyone looking for narrative drive in the Cyropaedia is bound to be disappointed. Xenophon’s near-death experience in the Anabasis is of course a rather striking contrast, providing us with narrative bound to be more enticing. But Xenophon could have chosen to present Cyrus as a figure with more flaws, and to present his series of conquests with rather more suspense. Cyrus, though, does not make mistakes (or makes precious few of them). After his boyhood, his education (despite the title—though a comment in our garden nicely suggested that ancient titles might more normally have applied only to the outset of a book) is largely complete. He does not learn by failure. He is an exemplar meant to teach us via his successes. Perhaps Xenophon had enough of failure to show in his Hellenica and even in the Anabasis, where the community of the 10,000 is as flawed as it is successful.
¶ 9 Leave a comment on paragraph 9 0 Xenophon thus chose to make the Cyropaedia dull in this sense. But why did he do so? I don’t have a ready answer, but perhaps can throw out some suggestions via another question. What do we find of interest in the Cyropaedia?
¶ 10 Leave a comment on paragraph 10 0 There are of course scholarly reasons to find the work of interest—its possible reliance on lost Persian sources; its role in the Greek debate about constitutions; its central role to any larger understanding of Xenophon’s worldview; its status at the head of various genres, or between various genres, etc.. But these are the sorts of things that are interesting not because of any intrinsic merits of the Cyropaedia, but because of our preexisting scholarly interests. They won’t sell the book to undergraduates (unless those undergraduates are budding classicists).
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What I find of greatest interest in the Cyropaedia is Cyrus’ ability to manipulate people to his own ends. I think this manipulative skill is something many readers would agree on, even if we disagree about his ends, and argue therefore about the connotations of “manipulation”. But of course there is tremendous debate here about the degree to which Xenophon wanted readers to view Cyrus as an unblemished ideal. I rather side with those who find Cyrus Machiavellian avant la lettre. I.e., I find Tatum’s reading of the work rather more on the mark than, say, that of Vivienne
¶ 12 Leave a comment on paragraph 12 0 I must be right about the Cyropaedia, therefore, because my reading makes it less dull.
David, thank you for your post. I appreciate it for a number of reasons. One, I’m glad that you are willing to play the provocateur! We need more of that in our field, especially over questions of such importance as Xenophon’s tone toward Cyrus. Two, your role as provocateur I think illustrates the value of discussing these questions in an on-line format. It would be very hard to get down to business either at a conference without excluding people from the conversation (either because of time constraints or the very tone of the discourse) or even in print publication, which is so slow and so easily lends itself to the author dictating the terms of the discussion (either by equivocation or merely omitting the other view). Here all of us can hone in on a specific passage or discuss a methodological approach in a timely and collegial way. I really hope that you and others will go through Xenophon’s text and pose questions about how you find Cyrus to be deceiving or exploiting people. As you say, this particular post is not the place for resolving all the questions, but I believe we could make a lot of headway by looking at individual passages. By the way, if you haven’t seenRasmussen 2009 Execllence Unleashed: Machiavelli’s Critique of Xenophon and the Moral Foundation of Politics, I think you would find it interesting. For my part, I have a book coming out this fall (Sandridge 2012 ) that treats the question of Xenophon’s tone toward Cyrus in some detail. I am much more in the “Cyrus is great” camp than not, but I don’t think Cyrus is perfect, or that Xenophon meant him as such. Cyrus’ awareness of his own human frailty, including his propensity for greed and sexual passion, I think contribute to his excellence as a leader. In short, I see Xenophon, as a leadership theorist, tackling quite a few major problems having to do with leadership in very sophisticated ways. This is not to say that he solves all the problems (or was even aware of them), but, as I say, I find him quite sophisticated. Now, on your larger question about the supposed “dullness” of the Cyropaedia, it is typically the responsibility of those who want to argue that it is not dull to make the case that readers need to “read” the work differently. You are correct that the darker/pessimistic/ironic readings of the Cyropaedia make it less dull. It does not follow that this is the only way to read the Cyropaedia to save it from dullness (though I don’t think that you were not making this claim). In fact, I would argue that many of those who have found the work interesting and inspiring, from Alexander (assuming, as many of us have here, that Alexander or his historians were familiar with the Cyropaedia) to Scipio Africanus to Thomas Jefferson, have been adherents to the more positive, optimistic view of Cyrus. I regularly teach the Cyropaedia in my Leadership in the Ancient World course, and students report liking it more than Plato’s Republic and wonder why they haven’t encountered it in a political science course. That Gibbon, a historian, didn’t think much of the work is not that surprising to me (see Sean’s post on the paucity of material on finance and supply in the Cyropaedia). So, aside from the questions of tone, how do I claim to read the Cyropaedia in ways that are less “dull”? 1. As I say above, I think Xenophon is tackling a lot of very thorny questions about leadership, ones that were certainly current in his own day but that we may wonder about even now. Every time I read the scene with Cyrus and Cyaxares (esp. where their rivalry comes to a head in Cyropaedia 5.5 ), I expect Cyrus just to kill the guy, or to lure him into some kind of trap (like Tissaphernes in the Anabasis ) and then kill him. That he doesn’t do this should be quite remarkable to anyone familiar with ancient Greek history or literature (certainly Macedonian history) or to anyone who has watched a movie about the mafia. On Cyrus’ treatment of Cyaxares (and whether it counts as “manipulation”) see G. Danzig 2012 (forthcoming). “The Best of the Achaemenids: Benevolence, Self-interest and the ‘Ironic’ Reading of Cyropaedia.” In Hobden and Tuplin 2012. 2. Aside from questions of leadership, I think the Cyropaedia can be read in dialogue (whether intentional or not) with Herodotus, Thucydides, Plato, and Isocrates. That most readers in the 21st century don’t have very much familiarity with these other authors may explain why they don’t enjoy the Cyropaedia as much. Even a simple story like the Two Coats in Cyropaedia 1.3.17 takes on much more significance when we think about it in the context of Plato Republic ‘s discussions of justice (or Aristotle Nichomachean Ethics ). 3. Increasingly, I think we are coming to see the Cyropaedia as a rather unique (even if “dull”) work of Greek literature, both from a narratological perspective and as a possible source for Achaemenid culture and Iranian folklore. Again, it’s hard to get at a lot of these questions without the kinds of expertise that most classicists do not have (and I certainly don’t mean to be giving myself out as an expert on Persia), but I think at least part of why we may find the story of the Cyropaedia dull is that we don’t know what to make of it. The more I read the Shahnameh , though, the more I think the story-telling techniques (and even the plot elements) may be borrowed from non-Greek traditions (as I suggest in my post on Unusual Naming). On the topic of story-telling, I don’t think we have come to appreciate yet the level of attention to the emotions and human psychology that Xenophon devotes in his work. eros has always been recognized as a major emotion in the work (and its ties to leadership), but I think we should also be looking at phthonos, thauma, philia, eleos, phobos, and many more.
4. Finally, I think the most fascinating thing about the Cyropaedia is the extent to which all of these questions are interrelated. You can’t really answer any of them without having some take on the others. This interconnectedness may explain why it is hard for different camps to see the perspective of the other (just as it is hard for members of different political parties, on which see this recent New Yorker article). This has become kind of a long answer to your very good question, so I will stop here and hope that the conversation continues! I will reiterate my request that we take a look at particular passages in the Cyropaedia to see if we can say more about what they reveal about Xenophon’s tone toward Cyrus, or, more generally, why we might or might not see them as “dull”.
One final point: to a certain extent no relic from the past is “dull”. Put in the right context, the tiniest potsherd or formulaic inscription or smidgen of papyrus or seemingly insignificant fragment inAthenaeus Deipnosophistae can amaze us. That said, as the voice of these relics becomes ever muted by a diminished interest in the ancient world and even of Classics programs at universities, we should be having some kind of debate about the place of the Cyropaedia (and other works) in classrooms and in popular discourse. Of course, part of this debate must take place among ourselves, but I will be making a post toward the end of next week that will hopefully expand the challenge you pose here into communities outside the halls of academia.
Thanks for your remarkably fast & full reply–you must indeed be a full-time gardener. You are of course right that the proof is in the pudding; Cyrus’ interaction with Cyaxares is an excellent test case. I agree with you that Cyrus’ response is remarkably restrained–and I heard the oral version of Gabriel Danzig’s piece, so suspect that he may agree with me that Cyrus is manipulative but know that he thinks that the manipulation is in a good (enough) cause.I suppose in some part my general blanket post here is meant as a lazy replacement for close reading, which I don’t fully have the time to do on the Cyropaedia in the next ten days, and also because I found myself (not alone) making rather general comments in the commentary in lieu of close readings. One of the funny features of this project is the time limit, which I am certain makes all sorts of sense, given the vast editorial task of shaping whatever you get into something usable this fall, but also makes life difficult for the rest of us. It’s one thing to launch into generalities about the Cyropaedia off the top of one’s head; it’s another to find time to present a close reading when one isn’t vacationing in paradise, with only Cyrus to occupy one’s thoughts. Very briefly re Cyaxares. Cyrus treats him, I agree,, better than he deserves to be treated–Cyaxares’ complaints aren’t well founded, and he loses power because Cyrus wields power better than he does. But it is also true that Cyrus plays him like a pipe; little of what he says to him, I think, is literally true–or at least most of what he says is true in only complex and interesting (not dull!) senses. I suspect (though I have reviewed neither Xenophon nor Danzig’s paper) that Danzig and I (and perhaps you) agree thus far. The decision about whether or not this treatment is admirable or justifiable is rather complex. This sort of manipulation may be justifiable and indeed necessary when dealing with an incompetent nominal superior whose amour-propre threatens the survival of his kingdom (and thus your own, allied to his). On the other hand, Cyaxares’ remarks, unjustified as they may be, do reveal just how Cyrus has outmaneuvered (a more neutral term than “manipulated”) him, and thus may help us analyze other cases where Cyrus’ maneuvers may not be as justified. I look forward to seeing your book, and thanks for the Rasmussen reference. I certainly agree that it is essential to keep lines of communication open on such things. One thing I think Gabriel Danzig and I share (I know him a bit from a couple of Xenophontic conferences) is an interest in crossing the ironic/non-ironic divide among readers of Xenophon, a line which so often breaks down along the Straussian/anything other than Straussian camps, with the concomitant & so often incendiary political overtones.
Your point about the time constraints is an excellent one. We should definitely entertain alternate procedures in the future for eliciting close readings, but your post does a great job of raising questions about the Cyropaedia that are still alive in everyone’s mind. Two questions I always come back to when thinking about Cyrus and Cyaxares are (1) what are Cyrus’ motives? and (2) what is the alternative?
On one, I think it’s fair to say that Xenophon allows for characters to have multiple motives. In Cyrus’ case I think he wants both the honor of being a successful leader but also to benefit people. The question then becomes “are the benefits of Cyrus’ leadership worth the honors (=privileges/resources/glory) Cyrus seems to want?” This is obviously not an easy balance to strike and the Cyaxares rivalry is one place where it almost fails. Plus, I think it’s fair to say that Xenophon does not push the tension as far as he might: what would have happened if Cyaxares had had a non-evil-but-still-less competent son to inherit the Medan throne? You might argue that the tension is pushed further in theAnabasis , though there, too, Xenophon seems to think that there’s no way for Cyrus the Younger to outmaneuver Artaxerxes than to make war on him. It is a kill-or-be-killed proposition. On two, I can’t really think of a better alternative from anywhere in Greek literature, so I like your choice of “outmaneuvered” over “manipulate” to describe Cyrus’ treatment of Cyaxares. The problem seems to be as old as the rivalry between Agamemnon and Achilles in Iliad I . Cyaxares seems to me to have a special case of anosognosia; he’s a leader who’s not really bad, but just not as aware of what’s going on around him as Cyrus is. I’m sure we can all think of people we’ve worked for, or studied under, who shared this condition, whether we were right in our diagnosis or just imagined we were. Compare this to what we might call Cyrus’ hyper- (and perhaps implausible) attentiveness (cf. Cyropaedia 8.7.7 ).
Your questions are good ones. I think your question about the alternative here is a particularly good way of defending Cyrus, as I can’t name a better alternative for dealing with Cyaxares, and agree with you that there are plenty of obviously less pleasant alternatives. Outmaneuvering and even manipulation seem rather justifiable motives when dealing with inferior superiors. But can the same be said of Cyrus’ treatment of Abradatas and Pantheia, say?Cyrus’ motives, more generally speaking, are a bit of a mystery to me. His philanthropia is noted on numerous occasions, but it isn’t always clear to me just who Cyrus is trying to benefit–especially as time goes on. He begins having to help the Persians and Medes fight off an attack, which is clearly justified (there’s obviously no reason to think the Assyrians would be better rulers), but the benefits of his empire in the longer run aren’t nearly as clear to me. My guess is that Xenophon is indeed fond of the early Persia he sketches at the beginning of the work–but the egalitarian values of that society are undermined by Cyrus and his meritocarcy, and of course there’s 8.8 to worry about in the longer term. Neither is Cyrus, though, some megalomaniac would-be god-king. He’s not interested in honor for the sake of honor, I suspect we agree–he rather seems to think that honor and privilege are tools he can use in the same way he uses other resources.If the Cyropaedia is a work showing not only how to found an empire but why would shouldn’t found an empire–a very debatable point, I grant you, and one where contemporary distaste for imperialism is bound to (mis)shape our interpretations–it is a sort of a fortiori proof: if imperialism is bad even under as great a leader as Cyrus, then it must really be bad.
Dear David, I read the Cyropaedia along the same lines with you. I also find that there is a certain ambiguity in some (if not all) of Cyrus’ virtues (this was also the topic of my paper in the Xenophon conference, in 2009, if you remember). Another example of manipulation is, I think, Cyrus’ dialogue with his mother Mandane. But I also think that one could perhpas distinguish “different degrees of ambiguity or darkness” (some passages seem more markedly dark than others), and this explains, of course, the various interpretative possibilities that open up for the Cyropaedia and that render it less dull.
I’ve been pondering what I hope will be a helpful response to your thoughtful questions about the tone of the Cyropaedia (we can pursue Pantheia and Abradatas further in another post if you like) and to Melina’s comment below, as well as David C.’s comment to this post and Sean’s post about the Cyropaedia as a novel.
Let me start with Melina’s statement below, “I also find that there is a certain ambiguity in some (if not all) of Cyrus’ virtues.” I’m pretty sure I’m in full agreement with this statement. I can’t think of a single leadership virtue, in Cyrus or anyone else, that is not to some extent problematic or ambiguous, and I think Xenophon understood this, too (see my remarks on philanthropia below). I will go even further.
(1) Pretty much every speech act that a human being engages in is ambiguous in the sense that it can be taken multiple ways. If I say, “I love my mother,” I might mean anything from “I like my mother” to “I don’t like my mother” (assuming I say, “I like my mother” in a tone of protest). I might be expressing sexual attraction to my mother and I might be revealing nothing at all about her because I just uttered that sentence to make a larger point about tone in the Cyropaedia. Moreover, the meaning of my statement could change or evolve over time, according to my age, the time of day, where in the world I am, or whether I formulate my sentiment in English, French, or Latin. Artists and thinkers of all kinds may delight and enlighten their audiences by playing with these ambiguities.
So, probably everything we ever say has some ambiguity to it. I’m sure a mathematician or a philosopher could also explain why 2 + 2=4 is sometimes ambiguous.
(2) Nevertheless, as much as ambiguity is a feature of human communication, there is such a thing as trying to remove, minimize, or eliminate ambiguity. This happens all the time in practical situations, such as the writing of constitutions and in the passing of laws. Hopefully the lawmakers are aware enough of the ambiguity of their language that they make it clear where the law is to be followed to the letter and the parameters open to interpretation.
We also see the attempt to eliminate ambiguity in all sorts of leadership situations. A general does not look to “play” with the ambiguities of language when he/she sends an army into battle, and a teacher tries to make assignments as clear as possible, e.g., by assigning a paper that is 1,000 words long (without quotes from primary or secondary sources) rather than assign a page-limit, which would give the student an opportunity to play with the font and spacing. The same is true in most cases for coaches, parents, captains of ships, and CEO’s of corporations. Leaders often need to remove as much ambiguity from their language as possible and they are often successful at doing so when they are most aware of the inherent ambiguity in what they say. Moreover, leaders often use story-telling to convey their (to them unambiguous) points.
Perhaps one of the most salient (and sophistic) contexts in which we see communicators try to remove ambiguity from language is in political campaigns, where the argument is made in blunt, direct, and powerful language that “this man or woman is the best leader for the job!” See any political ad anywhere in the world. There may be tons of literary and rhetorical devices at work in these ads, but as far as I can tell ambiguity is not one of them, unless it is to point to ambiguity in one’s opponent (“He says one thing but does another. Can we ever know what he stands for?!).
(3) Finally, not only are there sometimes thorough attempts to remove ambiguity from the language, it is possible for the receiver of the message to register ambiguity when in fact the author of the message intended none. Note this ad for Republican presidential candidateHerman Cain , which was intended to present Cain as a sincere and passionate advocate for the “common man” (=Tea Party member). Nevertheless many were put off by his campaign manager, Mark Block’s, act of puffing a cigarette at the end of the ad and Cain’s own slow, creepy smile.
An even better example of what we might call seeing ambiguity (or irony) where the author intended none (and indeed tried to extricate it) might be whenever any monotheistic religious organization gathers together to insist on one canonical text as the sacred word of god. Many readers may detect ambiguity or inconsistency later, but presumably the goal was to demonstrate the importance of worshiping the one perfect, infallible god, properly understood.
Finally, and here’s where I address Sean’s question about the novel and Cyropaedia, the novels ofAyn Rand are in her own words straightforward presentations of perfected heroes and heroines, practicing capitalism, being rationally selfish, and inventing and creating all that the rest of civilization lives by. And unless Rand pulled off one of the most brilliant fake-outs in human history (way better than Andy Kaufmann), she was dead serious about her work: not only are her views pretty consistent across all of her fiction and non-fiction (sometimes it’s hard to tell where the two diverge), but she gave countless interviews saying that what her “heroes” advocated in her novels was exactly what she herself believed and believed in. Nevertheless, I imagine more than a few of us would detect some ambiguity in the fact that Rand considered herself a true feminist (in that she believed women were as rational as men and entitled to the same “individual” rights) but that she thought a woman would never be happy as president of the United States, and she made many of her heroines undergo what I could only describe as sadomasochistic torture at the hands of the “heroes” they idolized.
Anyone who has read the works of Ayn Rand could find further places of ambiguity. But my point is that if all we had were a few novels by her, I’m quite certain that we would interpret her heroes–darkly, ironically, and pessimistically–in some of the same language that we use to interpret Xenophon’s Cyrus: “he’s too good to be true, he’s selfish, he manipulates people to his own ends, and since Xenophon is a careful, smart, and sensitive writer, there’s no way he could actually have wanted us to take his hero at face value.” Some of us would surely say, “Rand must be offering up a very seductive and compelling form of (19th century American, industrial) heroism but then must be undercutting that ideal by making us feel less than inspired by some of the behavior of the heroes themselves.” Yet, if we did this with Ayn Rand, we would be very wrong. She did want everyone to take her at face value and she thought that anyone who didn’t get on board with her vision was a huge loser or, in her terms, “a second-hander.” Finally, to judge from the thousands of novels Rand still sells and the powerful influence her ideas exert over the Republican and Libertarian parties, many people still do take her at face value.
Where does this leave us regarding the tone of the Cyropaedia? I certainly don’t mean to draw any more parallels between Ayn Rand’s heroes and Xenophon’s hero than to say this: it is possible for an author to develop a sincere and carefully-worked out theory of character/ethics or a theory of leadership that readers nonetheless interpret ambiguously, and this ambiguity might derive from nothing more than holes in the theory that the author was not aware of, chose not to address, or sought to downplay. At the end of the day, doing, for example, what David C. suggests and asking ourselves to “supply some of the many pieces Xenophon leaves missing” might be the most interesting (=not dull) part of any any engagement with a text. Certainly if I ever taught Atlas Shrugged in a course, I would be more inclined to try to get students to think about why Rand conceived of her “ideal” characters as she did (and what she left out) rather than try to guide them in how to become the next Howard Roark or John Galt.
Now, all I have done so far is suggest a way in which reading the Cyropaedia “ambiguously” might plausibly take place, though Xenophon might have intended us to read Cyrus sincerely. What proof would I offer that I do not read him ambiguously, while continuing to agree with Melina that there is ambiguity in all of Cyrus’ virtues? Scholars who read Cyrus straightforwardly like to point out that the work is framed as a treatise on leadership: Xenophon begins the work by pointing out how hard it is to get people to follow leaders for any period of time and he offers of the example of Cyrus as a way of doing this “knowledgeably” (Cyropaedia 1.1.3 ). Moreover, (as in the case of Ayn Rand) we have all of Xenophon’s works and the virtues of leadership that he treats there greatly resemble Cyrus’ virtues. Xenophon’s works are full of a lot of “bad” people and “bad” leaders (Alcibiades, Tissaphernes, Artaxerxes, Menon, and to some extent Clearchus and Proxenus, among others). Cyrus does not resemble these in any obvious way and he looks more like the good leaders. Still, even if this is true, it is conceivable that Xenophon is being ambiguous or ironic everywhere.
Here’s why I don’t think that’s the case, and it derives from the fact that the leadership traits Xenophon treats are problematic and ambiguous–and I believe Xenophon knew it. Take the seemingly innocent case of philanthropia, the “love of mankind” or inDover 1974 ‘s translation, “a fondness for humans” (Greek Popular Morality). What in the world does philanthropia mean for a leader, when in fact it was (seemingly) originally a virtue ascribed to gods who did things for mortals outside of a strict contractual bond (cf. Prometheus)? What would it mean for a leader to “love all humans”? Should a leader show any preference for friends, family, members of the same political party, fellow citizens, fellow countrymen–or is the leader somehow supposed to love everyone in the same way, to the same degree, all the time? How can a leader practice philanthropia (which often entails generous gift-giving) without worrying that he/she will render the followers lazy and unmotivated to campaign, or indeed so resourceful as to plot against the leader? How can a leader do good deeds for the followers without worrying about a rivalry with other good-deed doers (cf. Prometheus and Zeus)? How can a leader give away so many resources and make sure that his/her friends will remain loyal? How can a leader love his/her fellow human and avoid being duped by the mere appearance of reciprocal friendship? How can a leader spend all of his/her time caring for others without going crazy from the stress? How can a leader show a love of humanity without coming across as condescending or “holier than thou”?
I obviously don’t have the space here to show how Xenophon tackles these questions with his version of Cyrus’ philanthropia (and thus my argument is incomplete; I do intend to show this in my book), but I believe that that is what he is up to (if it’s not obvious I put a lot of thematic stock in Xenophon’s formulation of Cyrus’ nature that he was “most loving of humanity, most loving of learning, and most loving on honor,”Cyropaedia 1.2.1 .). The point seems not to be to show Cyrus as an ambiguous leader but as a leader doing his best to work through, in lots of different situations, the ambiguities in all of the leadership traits.
Does he succeed? Not entirely. To continue with philanthropia, Cyrus does not love all of mankind equally. He appoints his son, Cambyses, to be heir to the Persian throne. There is no mention of Cambyses’ qualifications for this office (other than age and birth), even though we have witnessed Cyrus on many occasions appointing others to high honor on the basis of their achievements, regardless of their class or nationality. Why did he not do this with Cambyses, especially since a lot of people reading the Cyropaedia probably knew that Cambyses was a terrible king? I think the answer in this case is pretty simple: Cyrus was bound by Persian law to appoint his son and Xenophon was bound to report what obviously happened in Persian history. We may add that maybe Xenophon didn’t have a very good idea in general about how to work around the principle of hereditary leadership (he works around Cyaxares, too, by giving him no male heirs).
So, even though we might detect an ambiguity or an inconsistency here, I don’t think that’s what’s going on. Xenophon never says that Cyrus is perfect, ideal, or complete. He does say on many occasions that Cyrus is best at something and I think if Xenophon were asked why he didn’t figure everything out, he might respond by saying (I imagine fancifully):
“What’s the alternative, Plato’s Philosopher king? Well, the Philosopher king has a lot going for him in the way of intelligence and even self-restraint, justice, and courage, but my leader actually wants to lead, motivated as he is by a love of humanity and a love of being honored! As someone who’s read a lot about leadership, shared the company of many leaders, and been a leader myself, it’s the best I can do.”
To your point 3, I do think the psychological realism in Cyropaedia is striking (even if the adult Cyrus is too good to be true). Not only do we have a rare picture of a child, but we get Cyrus’ comment atCyropaedia 3.3.54 that the shock of battle can make people forget what they have practiced many times. This is a commonplace in North America today, but how often do we see something so frank in Greek literature?
That is a very good point about battle trauma, Sean. I’m going to do a post later in the week on the Cyropaedia in the 21st century, please make it again there!