Plato, Republic (English) (XML Header) [genre: prose] [word count] [lemma count] [Pl. Resp.].
<<Pl. Resp. 571a Pl. Resp. 573d (Greek) >>Pl. Resp. 575c

of his idle and prodigal note appetites, a monstrous winged note drone. Or do you think the spirit of desire in such men is aught else?” “Nothing but that,” he said. “And when the other appetites, buzzing note about it, replete with incense and myrrh and chaplets and wine, and the pleasures that are released in such revelries, magnifying and fostering it to the utmost, awaken in the drone the sting of unsatisfied yearnings, note why then this protector of the soul has madness for his body-guard and runs amuck, note and if it finds in the man 573aany opinions or appetites accounted note worthy and still capable of shame, it slays them and thrusts them forth until it purges note him of sobriety, and fills and infects him with frenzy brought in from outside. note” “A perfect description,” he said, “of the generation of the tyrannical man.” “And is not this analogy,” said I, “the reason why Love has long since been called a tyrant note?” “That may well be,” he said. “And does not a drunken man, note my friend,” I said, 573c“have something of this tyrannical temper?” “Yes, he has.” “And again the madman, the deranged man, attempts and expects to rule over not only men but gods.” “Yes indeed, he does,” he said. “Then a man becomes tyrannical in the full sense of the word, my friend,” I said, “when either by nature or by habits or by both he has become even as the drunken, the erotic, the maniacal.” “Assuredly.”

“Such, it seems, is his origin and character, note but what is his manner of life?” “As the wits say, 573dyou shall tell me. note” “I do,” I said; “for, I take it, next there are among them feasts and carousals and revellings and courtesans note and all the doings of those whose note souls are entirely swayed note by the indwelling tyrant Eros.” “Inevitably,” he said. “And do not many and dread appetites shoot up beside this master passion every day and night in need of many things?” “Many indeed.” “And so any revenues there may be are quickly expended.” “Of course.” “And after this 573ethere are borrowings and levyings note upon the estate?” “Of course.” “And when all these resources fail, must there not come a cry from the frequent and fierce nestlings note of desire hatched in his soul, and must not such men, urged, as it were by goads, by the other desires, and especially by the ruling passion itself as captain of their bodyguard—to keep up the figure—must they not run wild and look to see who has aught that can be taken from him by deceit 574aor violence?” “Most certainly.” “And so he is compelled to sweep it in from every source note or else be afflicted with great travail and pain. note” “He is.” “And just as the new, upspringing pleasures in him got the better of the original passions of his soul and robbed them, so he himself, though younger, will claim the right to get the better note of his father and mother, and, after spending his own share, to seize and convert to his own use a portion of his father's estate.” “Of course,” he said, “what else?” “And if they resist him, 574bwould he not at first attempt to rob and steal from his parents and deceive them?” “Certainly.” “And if he failed in that, would he not next seize it by force?” “I think so,” he said. “And then, good sir, if the old man and the old woman clung to it and resisted him, would he be careful to refrain from the acts of a tyrant?” “I am not without my fears,” he said, “for the parents of such a one.” “Nay, Adeimantus, in heaven's name, do you suppose that, for the sake of a newly found belle amie bound to him by no necessary tie, such a one would strike the dear mother, 574chis by necessity note and from his birth? Or for the sake of a blooming new-found bel ami, not necessary to his life, he would rain blows note upon the aged father past his prime, closest of his kin and oldest of his friends? And would he subject them to those new favorites if he brought them under the same roof?” “Yes, by Zeus,” he said. “A most blessed lot it seems to be,” said I, “to be the parent of a tyrant son.” “It does indeed,” he said. “And again, when the resources of his father and mother are exhausted note and fail such a one, 574dand the swarm note of pleasures collected in his soul is grown great, will he not first lay hands on the wall note of someone's house or the cloak of someone who walks late at night, and thereafter he will make a clean sweep note of some temple, and in all these actions the beliefs which he held from boyhood about the honorable and the base, the opinions accounted just, note will be overmastered by the opinions newly emancipated note and released, which, serving as bodyguards of the ruling passion, will prevail in alliance with it—I mean the opinions that formerly were freed from restraint in sleep,



Plato, Republic (English) (XML Header) [genre: prose] [word count] [lemma count] [Pl. Resp.].
<<Pl. Resp. 571a Pl. Resp. 573d (Greek) >>Pl. Resp. 575c

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