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                <requestUrn>urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0010.tlg019.perseus-eng2:161-180</requestUrn>
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                <urn>urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0010.tlg019.perseus-eng2:161-180</urn>
                <passage>
                    <TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><text xml:lang="eng"><body><div type="translation" n="urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0010.tlg019.perseus-eng2" xml:lang="eng"><div n="161" subtype="section" type="textpart"><p> But why speak of public affairs? For I have myself, in my own affairs, suffered not a
          little from this change. For when I was beginning to repair my own fortunes after I had
          lost in the Peloponnesian War the patrimony which remained to me from what my father had
          spent partly in rendering himself serviceable to the state and partly in educating me with
          such care that I was more conspicuous then and more distinguished among the youth of my
          own age and among my fellow-students than I am now among my fellow-citizens<note anchored="true" resp="ed">See General Introd. p. xi.</note>— </p></div><div n="162" subtype="section" type="textpart"><p>when, as I have said, I began to attach pupils to myself, I thought that if I could
          acquire a greater competence and attain a higher position than others who had started in
          the same profession, I should be acclaimed both for the superiority of my teaching and for
          the excellence of my conduct. </p></div><div n="163" subtype="section" type="textpart"><p>But the result has been the very opposite; for if I had turned out to be worthless and
          had excelled in nothing, no one would have made trouble for me;<note anchored="true" resp="ed">See 8, note.</note> nay, I might have been a flagrant offender and yet lived
          secure—from the sycophants, at any rate. But now, instead of the acclaim which I expected,
          I have been rewarded with trials and perils and envy and calumny. </p></div><div n="164" subtype="section" type="textpart"><p>For so much does the Athens of this day rejoice in repressing and humiliating honest men,
          while giving license to the depraved to say and do what they please, that Lysimachus, a
          man who has elected to live by practicing intrigue and by preying from day to day on his
          fellow-citizens, is here in court denouncing me; while I, who have never in my life
          injured any man, who have kept my hands clean from such spoils, and have provided my
          advantages from foreigners who feel that I have served them well, am charged with grave
          offenses and placed in very great peril by this trial. </p></div><div n="165" subtype="section" type="textpart"><p>And yet all sensible men would do well to pray the gods to endow as many of our people as
          possible with the power of getting means from abroad in order to make themselves
          serviceable to the city, even as I have done. But, though there are many anomalies in my
          situation, it would be the crowning absurdity of all if, when the men who have paid me
          money are so grateful to me that they are still even now devoted to me, </p></div><div n="166" subtype="section" type="textpart"><p>you on whom I have spent my means should desire to penalize me. It would be even more
          absurd if, whereas Pindar, the poet, was so highly honored by our forefathers because of a
          single line of his in which he praises Athens as “the bulwark of Hellas”<note anchored="true" resp="ed">Of Pindar's encomium on Athens there is preserved a fragment
            (76 (46)): <foreign xml:lang="grc">*)=W TAI\ LIPARAI\ KAI\ I)OSTE/FANOI KAI\
              A)OI/DIMOI, *(ELLA/DOS E)/REISMA, KLEINAI\ *)AQA=NAI, DAIMO/NION PTOLI/EQRON</foreign>
            “O splendid, violet-crowned, famed in song, glorious/ Athens, bulwark of Hellas, a
            wondrous city.”</note> that he was made ”proxenos“<note anchored="true" resp="ed">”Friend of the city,“an honorary title conferred upon a foreigner by vote of the
            General Assembly, making him a sort of informal representative of Athens in his own
            country, and entitling him to special privileges and courtesies in Athens. See Gilbert,
              <title>Greek Constitutional Antiquities</title> pp. 181-182.</note> and given a
          present of ten thousand drachmas, I, on the other hand, who have glorified Athens and our
          ancestors with much ampler and nobler encomiums, should not even be privileged to end my
          days in peace. </p></div><div n="167" subtype="section" type="textpart"><p> With regard, then, to this as well as to the other charges of my accuser, I consider
          that the defense which I have made is a sufficient answer. Nevertheless, I am not going to
          hesitate to confide in you the truth as to how I now feel about the pending trial and how
          I felt about it at the first. I was very confident that for myself personally I could make
          out a good case; </p></div><div n="168" subtype="section" type="textpart"><p>for I relied upon the character of my life and conduct, and believed that I had no lack
          of arguments to justify them. But as I observed not only the intolerant feeling toward the
          teaching of eloquence on the part of those who are churlish toward everyone, but the
          truculent attitude towards it on the part of my fellow-citizens in general, I began to be
          afraid that the truth regarding me personally might be overlooked and that I might suffer
          some harm from the common prejudice against the sophists. </p></div><div n="169" subtype="section" type="textpart"><p>But as time went on, and I fell to thinking what I should do in the present
          circumstances, I ceased being fearful and disturbed on this account, not without good
          reason, but after having weighed the probabilities and reassured myself. </p></div><div n="170" subtype="section" type="textpart"><p>For I knew that the honest men among you—and it is to those that I shall address
          myself—do not remain fixed in opinions which they have formed unjustly, but are in quest
          of the truth and are ready to be convinced by those who plead a just cause; and I believed
          that I should have abundant grounds to show that philosophy has been unjustly slandered,
          and that it deserves much more to be held in favor than in contempt; and I am still of the
          same opinion. </p></div><div n="171" subtype="section" type="textpart"><p> However, it is not surprising that liberal pursuits have sometimes failed of recognition
          and regard, nor that some people have been utterly misled about them. In fact we find that
          this happens in regard to ourselves as well as to other things without number. For our
          city, which is now and has been in the past the author of so many blessings both to our
          own people and to the other Hellenes, and which abounds in so many charms, has,
          nevertheless, a most serious drawback. </p></div><div n="172" subtype="section" type="textpart"><p>For Athens is so large and the multitude of people living here is so great, that the city
          does not present to the mind an image easily grasped or sharply defined, but, like a
          turbid flood, whatever it catches up in its course, whether men or things, in each case it
          sweeps them along pell-mell, and in some cases it imbues them with a reputation which is
          the opposite of the true; and exactly that has been the fortune of this system of
          education. </p></div><div n="173" subtype="section" type="textpart"><p> You must bear these things in mind, and not pass judgement in any trial without the
          exercise of reason, nor be as careless when you sit in judgement as you are in your
          private occupations, but must examine thoroughly each point and search for the truth,
          mindful of your oaths and of the laws under which you have come together to dispense
          justice. It is no minor question which is under discussion and on trial here, but the most
          important in the world. For you are to determine by your votes, not my fate only, but that
          of a way of life to which many of our youths are devoting their minds. </p></div><div n="174" subtype="section" type="textpart"><p> I suppose that you are not unaware of the fact that the government of the state is
          handed on by the older men to the youth of the coming generation; and that since the
          succession goes on without end, it follows of necessity that as is the education of our
          youth so from generation to generation will be the fortune of the state. Therefore, you
          must not let the sycophants have control of a thing so momentous, nor punish those who
          refuse to pay them money, while permitting those from whom they have received it to do
          whatever they please. </p></div><div n="175" subtype="section" type="textpart"><p>But if philosophy has an influence which tends to corrupt our youth, you ought not merely
          to punish the occasional offender whom some sycophant hales into court but to banish all
          who are engaged in teaching it. If, however, it has the opposite effect and helps and
          improves and makes better men of its devotees, then you should call a halt on those who
          load this study with abuse; you should strip the sycophants of their rewards, and counsel
          our young men to occupy themselves with this pursuit above all others. </p></div><div n="176" subtype="section" type="textpart"><p> I would have given a good deal, assuming that I was doomed by fate to defend myself
          against this charge, if I could have faced this trial in the fullness of my vigor; for in
          that case I should have felt no misgiving but should have been better able both to protect
          myself from my accuser and to champion the cause of liberal education. Now, however, I am
          afraid that, although I have been enabled by this education to speak well enough on other
          themes, I may find that I have discoursed less ably upon this subject than upon matters
          which should have concerned me less. </p></div><div n="177" subtype="section" type="textpart"><p>And yet I would rather lay down my life this day—for you shall have the truth even though
          the words be inept<note anchored="true" resp="ed">So Socrates (<bibl n="Plat. Apol. 32d">Plat. Apol. 32d</bibl>) tones down an assertion which might otherwise have sounded
            over-heroic.</note>—after having spoken adequately upon this theme and persuaded you to
          look upon the study of eloquence in its true light, than live many times my allotted span
          and see it continue to fare among you as it now does. </p></div><div n="178" subtype="section" type="textpart"><p> My aspiration, then, is much greater than my power to do the subject justice; but yet I
          shall try as best I can to explain what is the nature of this education, what is its
          power, what of the other arts it is akin to, what benefit it is to its devotees, and what
          claims I make for it. For I think that when you know the truth about this you will be in a
          better position to deliberate and pronounce judgement upon it. </p></div><div n="179" subtype="section" type="textpart"><p>But I beg of you, if I appear to carry on the discussion in a manner far removed from
          that which is customary here, not to be impatient but to bear with me,<note anchored="true" resp="ed">Cf. <bibl n="Plat. Apol. 17b">Plat. Apol. 17b
            ff.</bibl></note> remembering that when a man is defending himself on a charge unlike
          any other, he must resort to a kind of pleading which is out of the ordinary. Be patient,
          therefore, with the manner of my discourse and with my frankness of speech; permit me to
          use up the time allotted to my defense; and then cast your ballots as each of you thinks
          is right and in accordance with the law. </p></div><div n="180" subtype="section" type="textpart"><p> In my treatment of the art of discourse, I desire, like the genealogists, to start at
          the beginning.<note anchored="true" resp="ed">Literally, I desire first to discuss the art
            of discourse after the manner of the genealogists.</note> It is acknowledged that the
          nature of man is compounded of two parts, the physical and the mental, and no one would
          deny that of these two the mind comes first and is of greater worth; for it is the
          function of the mind to decide both on personal and on public questions, and of the body
          to be servant to the judgements of the mind. </p></div></div></body></text></TEI>
                </passage>
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