<GetPassage xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns="http://chs.harvard.edu/xmlns/cts">
            <request>
                <requestName>GetPassage</requestName>
                <requestUrn>urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0059.tlg023.perseus-eng2:478</requestUrn>
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            <reply>
                <urn>urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0059.tlg023.perseus-eng2:478</urn>
                <passage>
                    <TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><text xml:lang="eng"><body><div type="translation" n="urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0059.tlg023.perseus-eng2" xml:lang="eng"><div type="textpart" subtype="section" resp="perseus" n="478"><said who="#Polus"><label>Pol.</label><p>It must be.</p></said><milestone unit="page" resp="Stephanus" n="478"/><milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="478a"/><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label><p>And what from wickedness and injustice?  If you are not ready for that offhand, consider it thus:  whither and to whom do we take those who are in bodily sickness?</p></said><said who="#Polus"><label>Pol.</label><p>To the doctor, Socrates.</p></said><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label><p>And whither the wrongdoers and libertines?</p></said><said who="#Polus"><label>Pol.</label><p>To the law-court, do you mean?</p></said><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label><p>Yes, and to pay the penalty?</p></said><said who="#Polus"><label>Pol.</label><p>I agree.</p></said><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label><p>Then is it not by employing a kind of justice that those punish who punish aright?</p></said><said who="#Polus"><label>Pol.</label><p>Clearly so.</p></said><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label><p>Then money-making relieves us from poverty, <milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="478b"/> medicine from disease, and justice from licentiousness and injustice.</p></said><said who="#Polus"><label>Pol.</label><p>Apparently.</p></said><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label><p>Which then is the fairest of these things?</p></said><said who="#Polus"><label>Pol.</label><p>Of what things, pray?</p></said><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label><p>Moneymaking, medicine, justice.</p></said><said who="#Polus"><label>Pol.</label><p>Justice, Socrates, is far above the others.</p></said><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label><p>Now again, if it is fairest, it causes either most pleasure or benefit or both.</p></said><said who="#Polus"><label>Pol.</label><p>Yes.</p></said><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label><p>Well then, is it pleasant to be medically treated, and do those who undergo such treatment enjoy it?</p></said><said who="#Polus"><label>Pol.</label><p>I do not think so.</p></said><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label><p>But it is beneficial, is it not?</p></said><milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="478c"/><said who="#Polus"><label>Pol.</label><p>Yes.</p></said><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label><p>Because one is relieved of a great evil, and hence it is worth while to endure the pain and be well.</p></said><said who="#Polus"><label>Pol.</label><p>Of course.</p></said><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label><p>Is this then the happiest state of body for a man to be in—that of being medically treated—or that of never being ill at all?</p></said><said who="#Polus"><label>Pol.</label><p>Clearly, never being ill.</p></said><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label><p>Yes, for what we regarded as happiness, it seems, was not this relief from evil, but its non-acquisition at any time.</p></said><said who="#Polus"><label>Pol.</label><p>That is so.</p></said><milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="478d"/><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label><p>Well now, which is the more wretched of two persons who have something evil either in body or in soul, he who is medically treated and is relieved of the evil, or he who is not treated and keeps it?</p></said><said who="#Polus"><label>Pol.</label><p>To my thinking, he who is not treated.</p></said><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label><p>And we found that paying the penalty is a relief from the greatest evil, wickedness?</p></said><said who="#Polus"><label>Pol.</label><p>We did.</p></said><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label><p>Because, I suppose, the justice of the court reforms us and makes us juster, and acts as a medicine for wickedness.</p></said><said who="#Polus"><label>Pol.</label><p>Yes.</p></said><milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="478e"/><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label><p>Happiest therefore is he who has no vice in his soul, since we found this to be the greatest of evils.</p></said><said who="#Polus"><label>Pol.</label><p>Clearly so.</p></said><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label><p>Next after him, I take it, is he who is relieved of it.</p></said><said who="#Polus"><label>Pol.</label><p>So it seems.</p></said><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label><p>And that was the man who is reproved, reprimanded, and made to pay the penalty.</p></said><said who="#Polus"><label>Pol.</label><p>Yes.</p></said><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label><p>Hence the worst life is led by him who has the vice and is not relieved of it.</p></said><said who="#Polus"><label>Pol.</label><p>Apparently.</p></said></div></div></body></text></TEI>
                </passage>
            </reply>
            </GetPassage>