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and for more if the magistrates think fit, having no regard to winter cold or
summer heat; and they should go out en masse, including their wives and
their children, when the magistrates determine to lead forth the whole people,
or in separate portions when summoned by them; and they should always
provide that there should be games and sacrificial feasts, and they should have
tournaments, imitating in as lively a manner as they can real battles. And they
should distribute prizes of victory and valour to the competitors, passing
censures and encomiums on one another according to the characters which
they bear in the contests and their whole life, honouring him who seems to be
the best, and blaming him who is the opposite. And let poets celebrate the
victors—not however every poet, but only one who in the first place is not
less than fifty years of age; nor should he be one who, although he may have
musical and poetical gifts, has never in his life done any noble or illustrious
action; but those who are themselves good and also honourable in the state,
creators of noble actions—let their poems be sung, even though they be not
very musical. And let the judgment of them rest with the instructor of youth
and the other guardians of the laws, who shall give them this privilege, and
they alone shall be free to sing; but the rest of the world shall not have this
liberty. Nor shall any one dare to sing a song which has not been approved by
the judgment of the guardians of the laws, not even if his strain be sweeter
than the songs of Thamyras and Orpheus; but only and Orpheus; but only
such poems as have been judged sacred and dedicated to the Gods, and such
as are the works of good men, which praise of blame has been awarded and
which have been deemed to fulfil their design fairly.
The regulations about and about liberty of speech in poitry, ought to apply
equally to men and women. The legislator may be supposed to argue the
question in his own mind:—Who are my citizens for whom I have set in order
the city? Are they not competitors in the greatest of all contests, and have they
not innumerable rivals? To be sure, will be the natural, reply. Well, but if we
were training boxers, or pancratiasts, or any other sort of athletes, would they
never meet until the hour of contest arrived; and should we do nothing to
prepare ourselves previously by daily practice? Surely, if we were boxers we
should have been learning to fight for many days before, and exercising
ourselves in imitating all those blows and wards which we were intending to
use in the hour of conflict; and in order that we might come as near to reality
as possible, instead of cestuses we should put on boxing gloves, that the
blows and the wards might be practised by us to the utmost of our power. And
if there were a lack of competitors, the ridicule of fools would ryot deter us
from hanging up a lifeless image and practising at that. Or if we had no
adversary at all, animate or inanimate, should we not venture in the dearth of
antagonists to spar by ourselves? In what other manner could we ever study
1494
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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