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sort, I should blush for shame, whether I was convicted before many, or
before a few, or by myself alone; and if I died from want of ability to do so,
that would indeed grieve me. But if I died because I have no powers of
flattery or rhetoric, I am very sure that you would not find me repining at
death. For no man who is not an utter fool and coward is afraid of death itself,
but he is afraid of doing wrong. For to go to the world below having one’s
soul full of injustice is the last and worst of all evils. And in proof of what I
say, if you have no objection, I should like to tell you a story.
CALLICLES: Very well, proceed; and then we shall have done.
SOCRATES: Listen, then, as story-tellers say, to a very pretty tale, which I
dare say that you may be disposed to regard as a fable only, but which, as I
believe, is a true tale, for I mean to speak the truth. Homer tells us (Il.), how
Zeus and Poseidon and Pluto divided the empire which they inherited from
their father. Now in the days of Cronos there existed a law respecting the
destiny of man, which has always been, and still continues to be in Heaven,—
that he who has lived all his life in justice and holiness shall go, when he is
dead, to the Islands of the Blessed, and dwell there in perfect happiness out of
the reach of evil; but that he who has lived unjustly and impiously shall go to
the house of vengeance and punishment, which is called Tartarus. And in the
time of Cronos, and even quite lately in the reign of Zeus, the judgment was
given on the very day on which the men were to die; the judges were alive,
and the men were alive; and the consequence was that the judgments were not
well given. Then Pluto and the authorities from the Islands of the Blessed
came to Zeus, and said that the souls found their way to the wrong places.
Zeus said: ‘I shall put a stop to this; the judgments are not well given, because
the persons who are judged have their clothes on, for they are alive; and there
are many who, having evil souls, are apparelled in fair bodies, or encased in
wealth or rank, and, when the day of judgment arrives, numerous witnesses
come forward and testify on their behalf that they have lived righteously. The
judges are awed by them, and they themselves too have their clothes on when
judging; their eyes and ears and their whole bodies are interposed as a veil
before their own souls. All this is a hindrance to them; there are the clothes of
the judges and the clothes of the judged.—What is to be done? I will tell you:
—In the first place, I will deprive men of the foreknowledge of death, which
they possess at present: this power which they have Prometheus has already
received my orders to take from them: in the second place, they shall be
entirely stripped before they are judged, for they shall be judged when they
are dead; and the judge too shall be naked, that is to say, dead—he with his
naked soul shall pierce into the other naked souls; and they shall die suddenly
and be deprived of all their kindred, and leave their brave attire strewn upon
the earth—conducted in this manner, the judgment will be just. I knew all
241
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book The Complete Plato"
The Complete Plato
- Title
- The Complete Plato
- Author
- Plato
- Date
- ~347 B.C.
- Language
- English
- License
- PD
- Size
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Pages
- 1612
- Keywords
- Philosophy, Antique, Philosophie, Antike, Dialogues, Metaphysik, Metaphysics, Ideologie, Ideology, Englisch
- Categories
- Geisteswissenschaften
- International