On this page
-
Text (1)
-
Untitled Article
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
-
-
Transcript
-
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
Untitled Article
at what is best , not at what is most agreeable , and not choosing to do those fine things which you recommend , I shall not know what to say in a court of justice . What I said to Polus , would apply to myself . I shall be judged as a physician would , if tried ^ before children , on the accusation of a cook . What could such a person say in his defence ?
Suppose his accuser to say , See what evils this man has inflicted upon you , cutting and burning and emaciating you , giving you bitter draughts , and forcing you to fast ; not like me , who have feasted you with every thing that is delightful . What could the physician say to all this ? If he said the truth , " I did all these things for your health , " do you not think that such judges would hoot him down V C . * Probably /
S . * And I myself , I well know , should be treated in a similar manner , if I were brought before a court of justice . For I shall not be able to remind the judges of any pleasures that I have procured for them , which are what they understand by benefits . But I do not envy either the providers or those for whom they provide . And if any one should say that I corrupt the youth by unsettling their minds , or libel the older men by bitter speeches , either in private or in public , I shall neither be able
to say the truth , viz . " I say and do all these things justly , and therefore for your good , " nor shall I have any other defence ; so that I must be content to undergo my fate . * C . * Does a man , then , who is thus situated , so unable to protect himself , appear to you to be as he should be ? ' S . ' If that be in him , of which we have so often spoken : if he have protected himself , by never having said or done anything unjust , either towards men or gods . For this is , as we have frequently
admitted , the best sort of self-protection . If , therefore , any one should convict me of being incapable of affording this protection to myself or others , I should be ashamed , whether I were convicted in the presence of many , or of one only ; and if I were to perish from this kind of incapability , I should . be grieved ; but if I should die for want of Adulatory
Rhetoric , I should bear my death very easily . Death itself no one fears , who is not altogether irrational and unmanly ; but to commit injustice is an object of rational fear , for to arrive in the other world with the soul loaded with crimes , is the greatest of evils . I will , if you please , set forth to you in what manner this happens . I will relate to you a history , which you will , as I think , consider a fable , but I shall
state it to you as true . Socrates then introduces a mythos or legend , of the description so frequent in Plato , and which he never seems to deliver as truth , but as a symbol of some truth . This mythos relates to a future state , and a general judgment of mankind . Formerly ( he says ) men were judged on the day on which they were destined to die , and were tried by living judges :. but Pluto and the guardians of Elysium complained to Jupiter , that people frequently were sent to them who were undeserving ; for ,
being tried while yet alive , they were tried with their mortal garments not stripped off ; and many whose souls were evil , had dressed them out in a handsome body , and rank and wealth , and when the trial came on , they produced many witnesses , to assert that they had led a just life : and the judges were imposed upon by these means , more especially as they also were still alive , and gross material organs obstructed the clearness of ( heir mental sight . On this account it was ordered that men should no longer foresee their own death ; and tliat they should be tried naked , that i ^ ,
Untitled Article
888 Plato ' s Dialogues ; the Gorgias .
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Dec. 2, 1834, page 838, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2640/page/20/
-