This is according to nature, and common both to Greeks and barbarians. For, as members of a civil community, they live according to a common law; otherwise it would be impossible for the mass to execute any one thing in concert (in which consists a civil state), or to live in a social state at all. Law is twofold, divine and human. The ancients regarded and respected divine, in preference to human, law; in those times, therefore, the number of persons was very great who consulted oracles, and, being desirous of obtaining the advice of Jupiter, hurried to Dodona,
“to hear the answer of Jove from the lofty oak.”
The parent went to Delphi,
“anxious to learn whether the child which had been exposed (to die) was still living;”
while the child itself
“was gone to the temple of Apollo, with the hope of discovering its parents.”
And Minos among the Cretans,
“the king who in the ninth year enjoyed converse with Great Jupiter,”
every nine years, as Plato says, ascended to the cave of Jupiter, received ordinances from him, and conveyed them to men. Lycurgus, his imitator, acted in a similar manner; for he was often accustomed, as it seemed, to leave his own country to inquire of the Pythian goddess what ordinances he was to promulgate to the Lacedæmonians.
[Pg 180]
[CAS. 762]