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a time; he fancies that he is able to rule over himself and all mankind.
Cleinias. Quite true.
Athenian. Were we not saying that on such occasions the souls of the
drinkers become like iron heated in the fire, and grow softer and younger, and
are easily moulded by him who knows how to educate and fashion them, just
as when they were young, and that this fashioner of them is the same who
prescribed for them in the days of their youth, viz., the good legislator; and
that he ought to enact laws of the banquet, which, when a man is confident,
bold, and impudent, and unwilling to wait his turn and have his share of
silence and speech, and drinking and music, will change his character into the
opposite—such laws as will infuse into him a just and noble fear, which will
take up arms at the approach of insolence, being that divine fear which we
have called reverence and shame?
Cleinias. True.
Athenian. And the guardians of these laws and fellow–workers with them
are the calm and sober generals of the drinkers; and without their help there is
greater difficulty in fighting against drink than in fighting against enemies
when the commander of an army is not himself calm; and he who is unwilling
to obey them and the commanders of Dionysiac feasts who are more than
sixty years of age, shall suffer a disgrace as great as he who disobeys military
leaders, or even greater.
Cleinias. Right.
Athenian. If, then, drinking and amusement were regulated in this way,
would not the companions of our revels be improved? they would part better
friends than they were, and not, as now enemies. Their whole intercourse
would be regulated by law and observant of it, and the sober would be the
leaders of the drunken.
Cleinias. I think so too, if drinking were regulated as you propose.
Athenian. Let us not then simply censure the gift of Dionysus as bad and
unfit to be received into the State. For wine has many excellences, and one
pre–eminent one, about which there is a difficulty in speaking to the many,
from a fear of their misconceiving and misunderstanding what is said.
Cleinias. To what do you refer?
Athenian. There is a tradition or story, which has somehow crept about the
world, that Dionysus was robbed of his wits by his stepmother Here, and that
out of revenge he inspires Bacchic furies and dancing madnesses in others;
for which reason he gave men wine. Such traditions concerning the Gods I
1364
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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