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payment he was unwilling to do so.
Undoubtedly, he said, these are not sentiments which can be approved.
Loving Homer as I do, I hardly like to say that in attributing these feelings
to Achilles, or in believing that they are truly attributed to him, he is guilty of
downright impiety. As little can I believe the narrative of his insolence to
Apollo, where he says,
“Thou hast wronged me, O Far-darter, most abominable of deities. Verily I
would be even with thee, if I had only the power;”
or his insubordination to the river-god, on whose divinity he is ready to lay
hands; or his offerings to the dead Patroclus of his own hair, which had been
previously dedicated to the other river-god Spercheius, and that he actually
performed this vow; or that he dragged Hector round the tomb of Patroclus,
and slaughtered the captives at the pyre; of all this I cannot believe that he
was guilty, any more than I can allow our citizens to believe that he, the wise
Cheiron’s pupil, the son of a goddess and of Peleus who was the gentlest of
men and third in descent from Zeus, was so disordered in his wits as to be at
one time the slave of two seemingly inconsistent passions, meanness, not
untainted by avarice, combined with overweening contempt of gods and men.
You are quite right, he replied.
And let us equally refuse to believe, or allow to be repeated, the tale of
Theseus, son of Poseidon, or of Peirithous, son of Zeus, going forth as they
did to perpetrate a horrid rape; or of any other hero or son of a god daring to
do such impious and dreadful things as they falsely ascribe to them in our
day: and let us further compel the poets to declare either that these acts were
done by them, or that they were not the sons of God; both in the same breath
they shall not be permitted to affirm. We will not have them trying to
persuade our youth that the gods are the authors of evil, and that heroes are no
better than men—sentiments which, as we were saying, are neither pious nor
true, for we have already proved that evil cannot come from the gods.
Assuredly not. And, further, they are likely to have a bad effect on those
who hear them; for everybody will begin to excuse his own vices when he is
convinced that similar wickednesses are always being perpetrated by
“The kindred of the gods, the relatives of Zeus, whose ancestral altar, the
altar of Zeus, is aloft in air on the peak of Ida,”
and who have
“the blood of deities yet flowing in their veins.”
And therefore let us put an end to such tales, lest they engender laxity of
1078
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Buch The Complete Plato"
The Complete Plato
- Titel
- The Complete Plato
- Autor
- Plato
- Datum
- ~347 B.C.
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- PD
- Abmessungen
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Seiten
- 1612
- Schlagwörter
- Philosophy, Antique, Philosophie, Antike, Dialogues, Metaphysik, Metaphysics, Ideologie, Ideology, Englisch
- Kategorien
- Geisteswissenschaften
- International