Statesman By Plato
Persons of the Dialogue
THEODORUS, SOCRATES, THE ELEATIC STRANGER,
THE YOUNGER SOCRATES
SOCRATES: I owe you many thanks, indeed,
Theodorus, for the acquaintance both of Theaetetus
and of the Stranger.
THEODURUS: And in a little while, Socrates,
you will owe me three times as many, when
they have completed for you the delineation
of the Statesman and of the Philosopher,
as well as of the Sophist.
SOCRATES: Sophist, statesman, philosopher!
O my dear Theodorus, do my ears truly witness
that this is the estimate formed of them
by the great calculator and geometrician?
THEODURUS: What do you mean, Socrates?
SOCRATES: I mean that you rate them all at
the same value, whereas they are really separated
by an interval, which no geometrical ratio
can express.
THEODURUS: By Ammon, the god of Cyrene, Socrates,
that is a very fair hit; and shows that you
have not forgotten your geometry. I will
retaliate on you at some other time, but
I must now ask the Stranger, who will not,
I hope, tire of his goodness to us, to proceed
either with the Statesman or with the Philosopher,
whichever he prefers.
STRANGER: That is my duty, Theodorus;
having begun I must go on, and not leave
the work unfinished. But what shall be done
with Theaetetus?
THEODURUS: In what respect?
STRANGER: Shall we relieve him, and take
his companion, the Young Socrates, instead
of him? What do you advise?
THEODURUS: Yes, give the other a turn, as
you propose. The young always do better when
they have intervals of rest.
SOCRATES: I think, Stranger, that both of
them may be said to be in some way related
to me; for the one, as you affirm, has the
cut of my ugly face, the other is called
by my name. And we should always be on the
look-out to recognize a kinsman by the style
of his conversation. I myself was discoursing
with Theaetetus yesterday, and I have just
been listening to his answers; my namesake
I have not yet examined, but I must. Another
time will, do for me; to-day let him answer
you.
STRANGER: Very good. Young Socrates, do you
hear what the elder Socrates is proposing?
YOUNG SOCRATES: I do.
STRANGER: And do you agree to his proposal?
YOUNG SOCRATES: Certainly.
STRANGER: As you do not object, still less
can I. After the Sophist, then, I think that
the Statesman naturally follows next in the
order of enquiry. And please to say, whether
he, too, should be ranked among those who
have science.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Yes.
STRANGER: Then the sciences must be divided
as before?
YOUNG SOCRATES: I dare say.
STRANGER: But yet the division will not be
the same?
YOUNG SOCRATES: How then?
STRANGER: They will be divided at some other
point.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Yes.
STRANGER: Where shall we discover the path
of the Statesman? We must find and separate
off, and set our seal upon this, and we will
set the mark of another class upon all diverging
paths. Thus the soul will conceive of ail
kinds of knowledge under two classes.
YOUNG SOCRATES: To find the path is your
business, Stranger, and not mine.
STRANGER: Yes, Socrates, but the discovery,
when once made, must be yours as well as
mine.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Very good.
STRANGER: Well, and are not arithmetic and
certain other kindred arts, merely abstract
knowledge, wholly separated from action?
YOUNG SOCRATES: True.
STRANGER: But in the art of carpentering
and all other handicrafts, the knowledge
of the workman is merged in his work; he
not only knows, but he also makes things
which previously did not exist.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Certainly.
STRANGER: Then let us divide sciences in
general into those which are practical and
those which are-purely intellectual.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Let us assume these two divisions
of science, which is one whole.
STRANGER: And are "statesman,"
"king," "master," or
"householder," one and the same;
or is there a science or art answering to
each of these names? Or rather, allow me
to put the matter in another way.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Let me hear.
STRANGER: If any one who is in a private
station has the skill to advise one of the
public physicians, must not he also be called
a physician?
YOUNG SOCRATES: Yes.
STRANGER: And if any one who is in a private
station is able to advise the ruler of a
country, may not he be said to have the knowledge
which the ruler himself ought to have?
YOUNG SOCRATES: True.
STRANGER: But, surely the science of a true
king is royal science?
YOUNG SOCRATES: Yes.
STRANGER: And will not he who possesses this
knowledge, whether he happens to be a ruler
or a private man, when regarded only in reference
to his art, be truly called "royal"?
YOUNG SOCRATES: He certainly ought to be.
STRANGER: And the householder and master
are the same?
YOUNG SOCRATES: Of course.
STRANGER: Again, a large household may be
compared to a small state:-will they differ
at all, as far as government is concerned?
YOUNG SOCRATES: They will not.
STRANGER: Then, returning to the point which
we were just now discussing, do we not clearly
see that there is one science of all of them;
and this science may be called either royal
or political or economical; we will not quarrel
with any one about the name.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Certainly not.
STRANGER: This too, is evident, that the
king cannot do much with his hands, or with
his whole body, towards the maintenance of
his empire, compared with what he does by
the intelligence and strength of his mind.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Clearly not.
STRANGER: Then, shall we say that the king
has a greater affinity to knowledge than
to manual arts and to practical life in general?
YOUNG SOCRATES: Certainly he has.
STRANGER: Then we may put all together as
one and the same-statesmanship and the statesman-the
kingly science and the king.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Clearly.
STRANGER: And now we shall only be proceeding
in due order if we go on to divide the sphere
of knowledge?
YOUNG SOCRATES: Very good.
STRANGER: Think whether you can find any
joint or parting in knowledge.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Tell me of what sort.
STRANGER: Such as this: You may remember
that we made an art of calculation?
YOUNG SOCRATES: Yes.
STRANGER: Which was, unmistakably, one of
the arts of knowledge?
YOUNG SOCRATES: Certainly.
STRANGER: And to this art of calculation
which discerns the differences of numbers
shall we assign any other function except
to pass judgment on their differences?
YOUNG SOCRATES: How could we?
STRANGER: You know that the master-builder
does not work himself, but is the ruler of
workmen?
YOUNG SOCRATES: Yes.
STRANGER: He contributes knowledge, not manual
labour?
YOUNG SOCRATES: True.
STRANGER: And may therefore be justly said
to share in theoretical science?
YOUNG SOCRATES: Quite true.
STRANGER: But he ought not, like the calculator,
to regard his functions as at and when he
has formed a judgment;-he must assign to
the individual workmen their appropriate
task until they have completed the work.
YOUNG SOCRATES: True.
STRANGER: Are not all such sciences, no less
than arithmetic and the like, subjects of
pure knowledge; and is not the difference
between the two classes, that the one sort
has the power of judging only, and the other
of ruling as well?
YOUNG SOCRATES: That is evident.
STRANGER: May we not very properly say, that
of all knowledge, there are there are two
divisions-one which rules, and the other
which judges?
YOUNG SOCRATES: I should think so.
STRANGER: And when men have anything to do
in common, that they should be of one mind
is surely a desirable thing?
YOUNG SOCRATES: Very true.
STRANGER: Then while we are at unity among
ourselves, we need not mind about the fancies
of others?
YOUNG SOCRATES: Certainly not.
STRANGER: And now, in which of these divisions
shall we place the king?-Is he a judge and
a kind of spectator? Or shall we assign to
him the art of command-for he is a ruler?
YOUNG SOCRATES: The latter, clearly.
STRANGER: Then we must see whether there
is any mark of division in the art of command
too. I am inclined to think that there is
a distinction similar to that of manufacturer
and retail dealer, which parts off the king
from the herald.
YOUNG SOCRATES: How is this?
STRANGER: Why, does not the retailer receive
and sell over again the productions of others,
which have been sold before?
YOUNG SOCRATES: Certainly he does.
STRANGER: And is not the herald under command,
and does he not receive orders, and in his
turn give them to others?
YOUNG SOCRATES: Very true.
STRANGER: Then shall we mingle the kingly
art in the same class with the art of the
herald, the interpreter, the boatswain, the
prophet, and the numerous kindred arts which
exercise command; or, as in the preceding
comparison we spoke of manufacturers, or
sellers for themselves, and of retailers,-seeing,
too, that the class of supreme rulers, or
rulers for themselves, is almost nameless-shall
we make a word following the same analogy,
and refer kings to a supreme or ruling-for-self
science, leaving the rest to receive a name
from some one else? For we are seeking the
ruler; and our enquiry is not concerned with
him who is not a ruler.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Very good.
STRANGER: Thus a very fair distinction has
been attained between the man who gives his
own commands, and him who gives another's.
And now let us see if the supreme power allows
of any further division.
YOUNG SOCRATES: By all means.
STRANGER: I think that it does; and please
to assist me in making the division.
YOUNG SOCRATES: At what point?
STRANGER: May not all rulers be supposed
to command for the sake of producing something?
YOUNG SOCRATES: Certainly.
STRANGER: Nor is there any difficulty in
dividing the things produced into two classes.
YOUNG SOCRATES: How would you divide them?
STRANGER: Of the whole class some have life
and some are without life.
YOUNG SOCRATES: True.
STRANGER: And by the help of this distinction
we may make, if we please, a subdivision
of the section of knowledge which commands.
YOUNG SOCRATES: At what point?
STRANGER: One part may be set over the production
of lifeless, the other of living objects;
and in this way the whole will be divided.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Certainly.
STRANGER: That division, then, is complete;
and now we may leave one half, and take up
the other; which may also be divided into
two.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Which of the two halves do
you men?
STRANGER: Of course that which exercises
command about animals. For, surely, the royal
science is not like that of a master-workman,
a science presiding over lifeless objects;-the
king has a nobler function, which is the
management and control of living beings.
YOUNG SOCRATES: True.
STRANGER: And the breeding and tending of
living beings may be observed to be sometimes
a tending of the individual; in other cases,
a common care of creatures in flocks?
YOUNG SOCRATES: True.
STRANGER: But the statesman is not a tender
of individuals-not like the driver or groom
of a single ox or horse; he is rather to
be compared with the keeper of a drove of
horses or oxen.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Yes, I see, thanks to you.
STRANGER: Shall we call this art of tending
many animals together, the art of managing
a herd, or the art of collective management?
YOUNG SOCRATES: No matter;-Whichever suggests
itself to us in the course of conversation.
STRANGER: Very good, Socrates; and, if you
continue to be not too particular about names,
you will be all the richer in wisdom when
you are an old man. And now, as you say,
leaving the discussion of the name,
-can you see a way in which a person, by
showing the art of herding to be of two kinds,
may cause that which is now sought amongst
twice the number of things, to be then sought
amongst half that number?
YOUNG SOCRATES: I will try;-there appears
to me to be one management of men and another
of beasts.
STRANGER: You have certainly divided them
in a most straightforward and manly style;
but you have fallen into an error which hereafter
I think that we had better avoid.
YOUNG SOCRATES: What is the error?
STRANGER: I think that we had better not
cut off a single small portion which is not
a species, from many larger portions; the
part should be a species. To separate off
at once the subject of investigation, is
a most excellent plan, if only the separation
be rightly made; and you were under the impression
that you were right, because you saw that
you would come to man; and this led you to
hasten the steps. But you should not chip
off too small a piece, my friend; the safer
way is to cut through the middle; which is
also the more likely way of finding classes.
Attention to this principle makes all the
difference in a process of enquiry.
YOUNG SOCRATES: What do you mean, Stranger?
STRANGER: I will endeavour to speak more
plainly out of love to your good parts, Socrates;
and, although I cannot at present entirely
explain myself, I will try, as we proceed,
to make my meaning a little clearer.
YOUNG SOCRATES: What was the error of which,
as you say, we were guilty in our recent
division?
STRANGER: The error was just as if some one
who wanted to divide the human race, were
to divide them after the fashion which prevails
in this part of the world; here they cut
off the Hellenes as one species, and all
the other species of mankind, which are innumerable,
and have no ties or common language, they
include under the single name of "barbarians,"
and because they have one name they are supposed
to be of one species also. Or suppose that
in dividing numbers you were to cut off ten
thousand from all the rest, and make of it
one species, comprehending the first under
another separate name, you might say that
here too was a single class, because you
had given it a single name. Whereas you would
make a much better and more equal and logical
classification of numbers, if you divided
them into odd and even; or of the human species,
if you divided them into male and female;
and only separated off Lydians or Phrygians,
or any other tribe, and arrayed them against
the rest of the world, when you could no
longer make a division into parts which were
also classes.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Very true; but I wish that
this distinction between a part and a class
could still be made somewhat plainer.
STRANGER: O Socrates, best of men, you are
imposing upon me a very difficult task. We
have already digressed further from our original
intention than we ought, and you would have
us wander still further away. But we must
now return to our subject; and hereafter,
when there is a leisure hour, we will follow
up the other track; at the same time I wish
you to guard against imagining that you ever
heard me declare-
YOUNG SOCRATES: What?
STRANGER: That a class and a part are distinct.
YOUNG SOCRATES: What did I hear, then?
STRANGER: That a class is necessarily a part,
but there is no similar necessity that a
part should be a dass; that is the view which
I should always wish you to attribute to
me, Socrates.
YOUNG SOCRATES: So be it.
STRANGER: There is another thing which I
should like to know.
YOUNG SOCRATES: What is it?
STRANGER: The point at which we digressed;
for, if I am not mistaken, the exact place
was at the question, Where you would divide
the management of herds. To this you appeared
rather too ready to answer that them were
two species of animals; man being one, and
all brutes making up the other.
YOUNG SOCRATES: True.
STRANGER: I thought that in taking away a
part you imagined that the remainder formed
a class, because you were able to call them
by the common name of brutes.
YOUNG SOCRATES: That again is true.
STRANGER: Suppose now, O most courageous
of dialecticians, that some wise and understanding
creature, such as a crane is reputed to be,
were, in imitation of you, to make a similar
division, and set up cranes against all other
animals to their own special glorification,
at the same time jumbling together all the
others, including man, under the appellation
of brutes,-here would be the sort of error
which we must try to avoid.
YOUNG SOCRATES: How can we be safe?
STRANGER: If we do not divide the whole class
of animals, we shall be less likely to fall
into that error.
YOUNG SOCRATES: We had better not take the
whole?
STRANGER: Yes, there lay the source of error
in our former division.
YOUNG SOCRATES: How?
STRANGER: You remember how that part of the
art of knowledge which was concerned with
command, had to do with the rearing of living
creatures,-I mean, with animals in herds?
YOUNG SOCRATES: Yes.
STRANGER: In that case, there was already
implied a division of all animals into tame
and wild; those whose nature can be tamed
are called tame, and those which cannot be
tamed are called wild.
YOUNG SOCRATES: True.
STRANGER: And the political science of which
we are in search, is and ever was concerned
with tame animals, and is also confined to
gregarious animals.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Yes.
STRANGER: But then ought not to divide, as
we did, taking the whole class at once. Neither
let us be in too great haste to arrive quickly
at the political science; for this mistake
has already brought upon us the misfortune
of which the proverb speaks.
YOUNG SOCRATES: What misfortune?
STRANGER: The misfortune of too much haste,
which is too little speed.
YOUNG SOCRATES: And all the better, Stranger;-we
got what we deserved.
STRANGER: Very well: Let us then begin again,
and endeavour to divide the collective rearing
of animals; for probably the completion of
the argument will best show what you are
so anxious to know. Tell me, then-
YOUNG SOCRATES: What?
STRANGER: Have you ever heard, as you very
likely may-for I do not suppose that you
ever actually visited them-of the preserves
of fishes in the Nile, and in the ponds of
the Great King; or you may have seen similar
preserves in wells at home?
YOUNG SOCRATES: Yes, to be sure, I have seen
them, and I have often heard the others described.
STRANGER: And you may have heard also, and
may have been-assured by report, although
you have not travelled in those regions,
of nurseries of geese and cranes in the plains
of Thessaly?
YOUNG SOCRATES: Certainly.
STRANGER: I asked you, because here is a
new division of the management of herds,
into the management of land and of water
herds.
YOUNG SOCRATES: There is.
STRANGER: And do you agree that we ought
to divide the collective rearing of herds
into two corresponding parts, the one the
rearing of water, and the other the rearing
of land herds?
YOUNG SOCRATES: Yes.
STRANGER: There is surely no need to ask
which of these two contains the royal art,
for it is evident to everybody.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Certainly.
STRANGER: Any one can divide the herds which
feed on dry land?
YOUNG SOCRATES: How would you divide them?
STRANGER: I should distinguish between those
which fly and those which walk.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Most true.
STRANGER: And where shall we look for the
political animal? Might not an idiot, so
to speak, know that he is a pedestrian?
YOUNG SOCRATES: Certainly.
STRANGER: The art of managing the walking
animal has to be further divided, just as
you might have an even number.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Clearly.
STRANGER: Let me note that here appear in
view two ways to that part or class which
the argument aims at reaching-the one is
speedier way, which cuts off a small portion
and leaves a large; the other agrees better
with the principle which we were laying down,
that as far as we can we should divide in
the middle; but it is longer. We can take
either of them, whichever we please.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Cannot we have both ways?
STRANGER: Together? What a thing to ask!
but, if you take them in turn, you clearly
may.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Then I should like to have
them in turn.
STRANGER: There will be no difficulty, as
we are near the end; if we had been at the
beginning, or in the middle, I should have
demurred to your request; but now, in accordance
with your desire, let us begin with the longer
way; while we are fresh, we shall get on
better. And now attend to the division.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Let me hear.
STRANGER: The tame walking herding animals
are distributed by nature into two classes.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Upon what principle?
STRANGER: The one grows horns; and the other
is without horns.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Clearly.
STRANGER: Suppose that you divide the science
which manages pedestrian animals into two
corresponding parts, and define them; for
if you try to invent names for them, you
will find the intricacy too great.
YOUNG SOCRATES: How must I speak of them,
then?
STRANGER: In this way: let the science of
managing pedestrian animals be divided into
two parts and one part assigned to the horned
herd and the other to the herd that has no
horns.
YOUNG SOCRATES: All that you say has been
abundantly proved, and may therefore, be
assumed.
STRANGER: The king is clearly the shepherd
a polled herd, who have no horns.
YOUNG SOCRATES: That is evident.
STRANGER: Shall we break up this hornless
herd into sections, and endeavour to assign
to him what is his?
YOUNG SOCRATES: By all means.
STRANGER: Shall we distinguish them by their
having or not having cloven feet, or by their
mixing or not mixing the breed? You know
what I mean.
YOUNG SOCRATES: What?
STRANGER: I mean that horses and asses naturally
breed from one another.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Yes.
STRANGER: But the remainder of the hornless
herd of tame animals will not mix the breed.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Very true.
STRANGER: And of which has the Statesman
charge,-of the mixed or of the unmixed race?
YOUNG SOCRATES: Clearly of the unmixed.
STRANGER: I suppose that we must divide this
again as before.
YOUNG SOCRATES: We must.
STRANGER: Every tame and herding animal has
now been split up, with the exception of
two species; for I hardly think that dogs
should be reckoned among gregarious animals.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Certainly not; but how shall
we divide the two remaining species?
STRANGER: There is a measure of difference
which may be appropriately employed by you
and Theaetetus, who are students of geometry.
YOUNG SOCRATES: What is that?
STRANGER: The diameter; and, again, the diameter
of a diameter.
YOUNG SOCRATES: What do you mean?
STRANGER: How does man walk, but as a diameter
whose power is two feet?
YOUNG SOCRATES: Just so.
STRANGER: And the power of the remaining
kind, being the power of twice two feet,
may be said to be the diameter of our diameter.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Certainly; and now I think
that I pretty nearly understand you.
STRANGER: In these divisions, Socrates, I
descry what would make another famous jest.
YOUNG SOCRATES: What is it?
STRANGER: Human beings have come out in the
same class with the freest and airiest of
creation, and have been running a race with
them.
YOUNG SOCRATES: I remark that very singular
coincidence.
STRANGER: And would you not expect the slowest
to arrive last?
YOUNG SOCRATES: Indeed I should.
STRANGER: And there is a still more ridiculous
consequence, that the king is found running
about with the herd and in close competition
with the bird-catcher, who of all mankind
is most of an adept at the airy life.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Certainly.
STRANGER: Then here, Socrates, is still clearer
evidence of the truth of what was said in
the enquiry about the Sophist?
YOUNG SOCRATES: What?
STRANGER: That the dialectical method is
no respecter of persons, and does not set
the great above the small, but always arrives
in her own way at the truest result.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Clearly.
STRANGER: And now, I will not wait for you
to ask the, but will of my own accord take
you by the shorter road to the definition
of a king.
YOUNG SOCRATES: By all means.
STRANGER: I say that we should have begun
at first by dividing land animals into biped
and quadruped; and since the winged herd,
and that alone, comes out in the same class
with man, should divide bipeds into those
which have feathers and those which have
not, and when they have been divided, and
the art of the management of mankind is brought
to light, the time will have come to produce
our Statesman and ruler, and set him like
a charioteer in his place, and hand over
to him the reins of state, for that too is
a vocation which belongs to him.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Very good; you have paid
me the debt-I mean, that you have completed
the argument, and I suppose that you added
the digression by way of interest.
STRANGER: Then now, let us go back to the
beginning, and join the links, which together
make the definition of the name of the Statesman's
art.
YOUNG SOCRATES: By all means.
STRANGER: The science of pure knowledge had,
as we said originally, a part which was the
science of rule or command, and from this
was derived another part, which was called
command-for-self, on the analogy of selling-for-self;
an important section of this was the management
of living animals, and this again was further
limited to the manage merit of them in herds;
and again in herds of pedestrian animals.
The chief division of the latter was the
art of managing pedestrian animals which
are without horns; this again has a part
which can only be comprehended under one
term by joining together three names-shepherding
pure-bred animals. The only further subdivision
is the art of man herding-this has to do
with bipeds, and is what we were seeking
after, and have now found, being at once
the royal and political.
YOUNG SOCRATES: To be sure.
STRANGER: And do you think, Socrates, that
we really have done as you say?
YOUNG SOCRATES: What?
STRANGER: Do you think, I mean, that we have
really fulfilled our intention?-There has
been a sort of discussion, and yet the investigation
seems to me not to be perfectly worked out:
this is where the enquiry fails.
YOUNG SOCRATES: I do not understand.
STRANGER: I will try to make the thought,
which is at this moment present in my mind,
clearer to us both.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Let me hear.
STRANGER: There were many arts of shepherding,
and one of them was the political, which
had the charge of one particular herd?
YOUNG SOCRATES: Yes.
STRANGER: And this the argument defined to
be the art of rearing, not horses or other
brutes, but the art of rearing man collectively?
YOUNG SOCRATES: True.
STRANGER: Note, however, a difference which
distinguishes the king from all other shepherds.
YOUNG SOCRATES: To what do you refer?
STRANGER: I want to ask, whether any one
of the other herdsmen has a rival who professes
and claims to share with him in the management
of the herd?
YOUNG SOCRATES: What do you mean?
STRANGER: I mean to say that merchants husbandmen,
providers of food, and also training-masters
and physicians, will all contend with the
herdsmen of humanity, whom we call Statesmen,
declaring that they themselves have the care
of rearing of managing mankind, and that
they rear not only the common herd, but also
the rulers themselves.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Are they not right in saying
so?
STRANGER: Very likely they may be, and we
will consider their claim. But we are certain
of this,-that no one will raise a similar
claim as against the herdsman, who is allowed
on all hands to be the sole and only feeder
and physician of his herd; he is also their
matchmaker and accoucheur; no one else knows
that department of science. And he is their
merry-maker and musician, as far as their
nature is susceptible of such influences,
and no one can console and soothe his own
herd better than he can, either with the
natural tones of his voice or with instruments.
And the same may be said of tenders of animals
in general.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Very true.
STRANGER: But if this is as you say, can
our argument about the king be true and unimpeachable?
Were we right in selecting him out of ten
thousand other claimants to be the shepherd
and rearer of the human flock?
YOUNG SOCRATES: Surely not.
STRANGER: Had we not reason just to now apprehend,
that although we may have described a sort
of royal form, we have not as yet accurately
worked out the true image of the Statesman?
and that we cannot reveal him as he truly
is in his own nature, until we have disengaged
and separated him from those who bang about
him and claim to share in his prerogatives?
YOUNG SOCRATES: Very true.
STRANGER: And that, Socrates, is what we
must do, if we do not mean to bring disgrace
upon the argument at its close.
YOUNG SOCRATES: We must certainly avoid that.
STRANGER: Then let us make a new beginning,
and travel by a different road.
YOUNG SOCRATES: What road?
STRANGER: I think that we may have a little
amusement; there is a famous tale, of which
a good portion may with advantage be interwoven,
and then we may resume our series of divisions,
and proceed in the old path until we arrive
at the desired summit. Shall we do as I say?
YOUNG SOCRATES: By all means.
STRANGER: Listen, then, to a tale which a
child would love to hear; and you are not
too old for childish amusement.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Let me hear.
STRANGER: There did really happen, and will
again happen, like many other events of which
ancient tradition has preserved the record,
the portent which is traditionally said to
have occurred in the quarrel of Atreus and
Thyestes. You have heard no doubt, and remember
what they say happened at that time?
YOUNG SOCRATES: I suppose you to mean the
token of the birth of the golden lamb.
STRANGER: No, not that; but another part
of the story, which tells how the sun and
the stars once rose in the west, and set
in the east, and that the god reversed their
motion, and gave them that which they now
have as a testimony to the right of Atreus.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Yes; there is that legend
also.
STRANGER: Again, we have been often told
of the reign of Cronos.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Yes, very often.
STRANGER: Did you ever hear that the men
of former times were earthborn, and not begotten
of one another?
YOUNG SOCRATES: Yes, that is another old
tradition.
STRANGER: All these stories, and ten thousand
others which are still more wonderful, have
a common origin; many of them have been lost
in the lapse of ages, or are repeated only
in a disconnected form; but the origin of
them is what no one has told, and may as
well be told now; for the tale is suited
to throw light on the nature of the king.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Very good; and I hope that
you will give the whole story, and leave
out nothing.
STRANGER: Listen, then. There is a time when
God himself guides and helps to roll the
world in its course; and there is a time,
on the completion of a certain cycle, when
he lets go, and the world being a living
creature, and having originally received
intelligence from its author and creator
turns about and by an inherent necessity
revolves in the opposite direction.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Why is that?
STRANGER: Why, because only the most divine
things of all remain ever unchanged and the
same, and body is not included in this class.
Heaven and the universe, as we have termed
them, although they have been endowed by
the Creator with many glories, partake of
a bodily nature, and therefore cannot be
entirely free from perturbation. But their
motion is, as far as possible, single and
in the same place, and of the same kind;
and is therefore only subject to a reversal,
which is the least alteration possible. For
the lord of all moving things is alone able
to move of himself; and to think that he
moves them at one time in one direction and
at another time in another is blasphemy.
Hence we must not say that the world is either
self-moved always, or all made to go round
by God in two opposite courses; or that two
Gods, having opposite purposes, make it move
round. But as I have already said
(and this is the only remaining alternative)
the world is guided at one time by an external
power which is divine and receives fresh
life and immortality from the renewing hand
of the Creator, and again, when let go, moves
spontaneously, being set free at such a time
as to have, during infinite cycles of years,
a reverse movement: this is due to its perfect
balance, to its vast size, and to the fact
that it turns on the smallest pivot.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Your account of the world
seems to be very reasonable indeed.
STRANGER: Let us now reflect and try to gather
from what has been said the nature of the
phenomenon which we affirmed to be the cause
of all these wonders. It is this.
YOUNG SOCRATES: What?
STRANGER: The reversal which takes place
from time to time of the motion of the universe.
YOUNG SOCRATES: How is that the cause?
STRANGER: Of all changes of the heavenly
motions, we may consider this to be the greatest
and most complete.
YOUNG SOCRATES: I should imagine so.
STRANGER: And it may be supposed to result
in the greatest changes to the human beings
who are the inhabitants of the world at the
time.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Such changes would naturally
occur.
STRANGER: And animals, as we know, survive
with difficulty great and serious changes
of many different kinds when they come upon
them at once.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Very true.
STRANGER: Hence there necessarily occurs
a great destruction of them, which extends
also to-the life of man; few survivors of
the race are left, and those who remain become
the subjects of several novel and remarkable
phenomena, and of one in particular, which
takes place at the time when the transition
is made to the cycle opposite to that in
which we are now living.
YOUNG SOCRATES: What is it?
STRANGER: The life of all animals first came
to a standstill, and the mortal nature ceased
to be or look older, and was then reversed
and grew young and delicate; the white locks
of the aged darkened again, and the cheeks
the bearded man became smooth, and recovered
their former bloom; the bodies of youths
in their prime grew softer and smaller, continually
by day and night returning and becoming assimilated
to the nature of a newly-born child in mind
as well as body; in the succeeding stage
they wasted away and wholly disappeared.
And the bodies of those who died by violence
at that time quickly passed through the like
changes, and in a few days were no more seen.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Then how, Stranger, were
the animals created in those days; and in
what way were they begotten of one another?
STRANGER: It is evident, Socrates, that there
was no such thing in the then order of nature
as the procreation of animals from one another;
the earth-born race, of which we hear in
story, was the one which existed in those
days-they rose again from the ground; and
of this tradition, which is now-a-days often
unduly discredited, our ancestors, who were
nearest in point of time to the end of the
last period and came into being at the beginning
of this, are to us the heralds. And mark
how consistent the sequel of the tale is;
after the return of age to youth, follows
the return of the dead, who are lying in
the earth, to life; simultaneously with the
reversal of the world the wheel of their
generation has been turned back, and they
are put together and rise and live in the
opposite order, unless God has carried any
of them away to some other lot. According
to this tradition they of necessity sprang
from the earth and have the name of earth-born,
and so the above legend clings to them.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Certainly that is quite consistent
with what has preceded; but tell me, was
the life which you said existed in the reign
of Cronos in that cycle of the world, or
in this? For the change in the course of
the stars and the sun must have occurred
in both.
STRANGER: I see that you enter into my meaning;-no,
that blessed and spontaneous life does not
belong to the present cycle of the world,
but to the previous one, in which God superintended
the whole revolution of the universe; and
the several parts the universe were distributed
under the rule. certain inferior deities,
as is the way in some places still There
were demigods, who were the shepherds of
the various species and herds of animals,
and each one was in all respects sufficient
for those of whom he was the shepherd; neither
was there any violence, or devouring of one
another or war or quarrel among them; and
I might tell of ten thousand other blessings,
which belonged to that dispensation. The
reason why the life of man was, as tradition
says, spontaneous, is as follows: In those
days God himself was their shepherd, and
ruled over them, just as man, over them,
who is by comparison a divine being, still
rules over the lower animals. Under him there
were no forms of government or separate possession
of women and children; for all men rose again
from the earth, having no memory, of the
past. And although they had nothing of this
sort, the earth gave them fruits in abundance,
which grew on trees and shrubs unbidden,
and were not planted by the hand of man.
And they dwelt naked, and mostly in the open
air, for the temperature of their seasons,
was mild; and they had no beds, but lay on
Soft couches of grass, which grew plentifully
out of: the earth. Such was the life of man
in the days of Cronos, Socrates; the character
of our present life which is said to be under
Zeus, you know from your own experience.
Can you, and will you, determine which of
them you deem the happier?
YOUNG SOCRATES: Impossible.
STRANGER: Then shall I determine for you
as well as I can?
YOUNG SOCRATES: By all means.
STRANGER: Suppose that the nurslings of Cronos,
having this boundless leisure, and the power
of holding intercourse, not only with men,
but with the brute creation, had used all
these advantages with a view to philosophy,
conversing with the brutes as well as with
one another, and learning of every nature
which was gifted with any special power,
and was able to contribute some special experience
to the store of wisdom there would be no
difficulty in deciding that they would be
a thousand times happier than the men of
our own day. Or, again, if they had merely
eaten and drunk until they were full, and
told stories to one another and to the animals-such
stories as are now attributed to them-in
this case also, as I should imagine, the
answer would be easy. But until some satisfactory
witness can be found of the love of that
age for knowledge and: discussion, we had
better let the matter drop, and give the
reason why we have unearthed this tale, and
then we shall be able to get on.
In the fulness of time, when the change was
to take place, and the earth-born race had
all perished, and every soul had completed
its proper cycle of births and been sown
in the earth her appointed number of times,
the pilot of the universe let the helm go,
and retired to his place of view; and then
Fate and innate desire reversed the motion
of the world. Then also all the inferior
deities who share the rule of the supreme
power, being informed of what was happening,
let go the parts of the world which were
under their control. And the world turning
round with a sudden shock, being impelled
in an opposite direction from beginning to
end, was shaken by a mighty earthquake, which
wrought a new destruction of all manner of
animals. Afterwards, when sufficient time
had elapsed, the tumult and confusion and
earthquake ceased, and the universal creature,
once more at peace attained to a calm, and
settle down into his own orderly and accustomed
course, having the charge and rule of himself
and of all the creatures which are contained
in him, and executing, as far as he remembered
them, the instructions of his Father and
Creator, more precisely at first, but afterwords
with less exactness. The reason of the falling
off was the admixture of matter in him; this
was inherent in the primal nature, which
was full of disorder, until attaining to
the present order. From God, the constructor;
the world received all that is good in him,
but from a previous state came elements of
evil and unrighteousness, which, thence derived,
first of all passed into the world, and were
then transmitted to the animals. While the
world was aided by the pilot in nurturing
the animals, the evil was small, and great
the good which he produced, but after the
separation, when the world was let go, at
first all proceeded well enough; but, as
time went there was more and more forgetting,
and the old discord again held sway and burst
forth in full glory; and at last small was
the good, and great was the admixture of
evil, and there was a danger of universal
ruin to the world, and the things contained
in him. Wherefore God, the orderer of all,
in his tender care, seeing that the world
was in great straits, and fearing that all
might be dissolved in the storm and disappear
in infinite chaos, again seated himself at
the helm; and bringing back the elements
which had fallen into dissolution and disorder
to the motion which had prevailed under his
dispensation, he set them in order and restored
them, and made the world imperishable and
immortal.
And this is the whole tale, of which the
first part will suffice to illustrate the
nature of the king. For when the world turned
towards the present cycle of generation,
the age of man again stood still, and a change
opposite to the previous one was the result.
The small creatures which had almost disappeared
grew in and stature, and the newly-born children
of the earth became grey and died and sank
into the earth again. All things changed,
imitating and following the condition of
the universe, and of necessity agreeing with
that in their mode of conception and generation
and nurture; for no animal; was any longer
allowed to come into being in the earth through
the agency of other creative beings, but
as the world was ordained to be the lord
of his own progress, in like manner the parts
were ordained to grow and generate and give
nourishment, as far as they could, of themselves,
impelled by a similar movement. And so we
have arrived at the real end of this discourse;
for although there might be much to tell
of the lower animals, and of the condition
out of which they changed and of the causes
of the change, about men there is not much,
and that little is more to the purpose. Deprived
of the care of God, who had possessed and
tended them, they were left helpless and
defenceless, and were torn in pieces by the
beasts, who were naturally fierce and had
now grown wild. And in the first ages they
were still without skill or resource; the
food which once grew spontaneously had failed,
and as yet they knew not how to procure it,
because they-had never felt the pressure
of necessity. For all these reasons they
were in a great strait; wherefore also the
gifts spoken of in the old tradition were
imparted to man by the gods, together with
so much teaching and education as was indispensable;
fire was given to them by Prometheus, the
arts by Hephaestus and his fellow-worker,
Athene, seeds and plants by others. From
these is derived all that has helped to frame
human life; since the care of the Gods, as
I was saying, had now failed men, and they
had to order their course of life for themselves,
and were their own masters, just like the
universal creature whom they imitate and
follow, ever changing, as he changes, and
ever living and growing, at one time in one
manner, and at another time in another. Enough
of the story, which may be of use in showing
us how greatly we erred in the delineation
of the king and the statesman in our previous
discourse.
YOUNG SOCRATES: What was this great error
of which you speak?
STRANGER: There were two; the first a lesser
one, the other was an error on a much larger
and grander scale.
YOUNG SOCRATES: What do you mean?
STRANGER: I mean to say that when we were
asked about a king and statesman of the present;
and generation, we told of a shepherd of
a human flock who belonged to the other cycle,
and of one who was a god when he ought to
have been a man; and this a great error.
Again, we declared him to be, the ruler of
the entire State, without, explaining how:
this was not the whole truth, nor very intelligible;
but still it was true, and therefore the
second error was not so, great as the first.
Y SOCRATES: Very good.
STRANGER: Before we can expect to have a
perfect description of the statesman we must
define the nature of his office.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Certainly.
STRANGER: And the myth was introduced in
order to show, not only that all others are
rivals of true shepherd who is the object
of our search, but in order that we might
have a clearer view of him who is alone worthy
to receive this appellation, because, he
alone of shepherds and herdsmen, according
to the image which we have employed, has
the care of human beings.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Very true.
STRANGER: And I cannot help thinking, Socrates,
that the form of the divine shepherd is even
higher than that of a king; whereas the statesmen
who are now on earth seem to be much more
like their subjects in character, and which
more nearly to partake of their breeding
and education.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Certainly.
STRANGER: Still they must be investigated
all the same, to see whether, like the divine
shepherd, they are above their subjects or
on a level with them.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Of course.
STRANGER: To resume:-Do you remember that
we spoke of a command-for-self exercised
over animals, not singly but collectively,
which we called the art of rearing a herd?
YOUNG SOCRATES: Yes, I remember.
STRANGER: There, somewhere, lay our error;
for we never included or mentioned the Statesman;
and we did not observe that he had no place
in our nomenclature.
YOUNG SOCRATES: How was that?
STRANGER: All other herdsmen "rear"
their herds, but this is not a suitable term
to apply to the Statesman; we should use
a name which is common to them all.
YOUNG SOCRATES: True, if there be such a
name.
STRANGER: Why, is not "care" of
herds applicable to all? For this implies
no feeding, or any special duty; if we say
either "tending" the herds, or
"managing" the herds, or "having
the care" of them, the same word will
include all, and then we may wrap up the
Statesman with the rest, as the argument
seems to require.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Quite right; but how shall
we take the-next step in the division?
STRANGER: As before we divided the art of
"rearing" herds accordingly as
they were land or water herds, winged and
wingless, mixing or not mixing the breed,
horned and hornless, so we may divide by
these same differences the "teading"
of herds, comprehending in our definition
the kingship of to-day and the rule of Cronos.
YOUNG SOCRATES: That is clear; but I still
ask, what is to follow.
STRANGER: If the word had been "managing"
herds, instead of feeding or rearing them,
no one would have argued that there was no
care of men in the case of the politician,
although it was justly contended, that there
was no human art of feeding them which was
worthy of the name, or at least, if there
were, many a man had a prior and greater
right to share in such an art than any king.
YOUNG SOCRATES: True.
STRANGER: But no other art or science will
have a prior or better right than the royal
science to care for human society and to
rule over men in general.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Quite true.
STRANGER: In the next place, Socrates, we
must surely notice that a great error was
committed at the end of our analysis.
YOUNG SOCRATES: What was it?
STRANGER: Why, supposing we were ever so
sure that there is such an art as the art
of rearing or feeding bipeds, there was no
reason why we should call this the royal
or political art, as though there were no
more to be said.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Certainly not.
STRANGER: Our first duty, as we were saying,
was to remodel the name, so as to have the
notion of care rather than of feeding, and
then to divide, for there may be still considerable
divisions.
YOUNG SOCRATES: How can they be made?
STRANGER: First, by separating the divine
shepherd from the human guardian or manager.
YOUNG SOCRATES: True.
STRANGER: And the art of management which
is assigned to man would again have to be
subdivided.
YOUNG SOCRATES: On what principle?
STRANGER: On the principle of voluntary and
compulsory.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Why?
STRANGER: Because, if I am not mistaken,
there has been an error here; for our simplicity
led us to rank king and tyrant together,
whereas they are utterly distinct, like their
modes of government.
YOUNG SOCRATES: True.
STRANGER: Then, now, as I said, let us make
the correction and divide human care into
two parts, on the principle of voluntary
and compulsory.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Certainly.
STRANGER: And if we call the management of
violent rulers tyranny, and the voluntary
management of herds of voluntary bipeds politics,
may we not further assert that he who has
this latter art of management is the true
king and statesman?
YOUNG SOCRATES: I think, Stranger, that we
have now completed the account of the Statesman.
STRANGER: Would that we had Socrates, but
I have to satisfy myself as well as you;
and in my judgment the figure of the king
is not yet perfected; like statuaries who,
in their too great haste, having overdone
the several parts of their work, lose time
in cutting them down, so too we, partly out
of haste, partly out of haste, partly out
of a magnanimous desire to expose our former
error, and also because we imagined that
a king required grand illustrations, have
taken up a marvellous lump of fable, and
have been obliged to use more than was necessary.
This made us discourse at large, and, nevertheless,
the story never came to an end. And our discussion
might be compared to a picture of some living
being which had been fairly drawn in outline,
but had not yet attained the life and clearness
which is given by the blending of colours.
Now to intelligent persons a living being
had better be delineated by language and
discourse than by any painting or work of
art: to the duller sort by works of art.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Very true; but what is the
imperfection which still remains? I wish
that you would tell me.
STRANGER: The higher ideas, my dear friend,
can hardly be set forth except through the
medium of examples; every man seems to know
all things in a dreamy sort of way, and then
again to wake up and to know nothing.
YOUNG SOCRATES: What do you mean?
STRANGER: I fear that I have been unfortunate
in raising a question about our experience
of knowledge.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Why so?
STRANGER: Why, because my "example"
requires the assistance of another example.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Proceed; you need not fear
that I shall tire.
STRANGER: I will proceed, finding, as I do,
such a ready listener in you: when children
are beginning to know their letters-
YOUNG SOCRATES: What are you going to say?
STRANGER: That they distinguish the several
letters well enough in very short and easy
syllables, and are able to tell them correctly.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Certainly.
STRANGER: Whereas in other syllables they
do not recognize them, and think and speak
falsely of them.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Very true.
STRANGER: Will not the best and easiest way
of bringing them to a knowledge of what they
do not as yet know be-
YOUNG SOCRATES: Be what?
STRANGER: To refer them first of all to cases
in which they judge correctly about the letters
in question, and then to compare these with
the cases in which they do not as yet know,
and to show them that the letters are the
same, and have the same character in both
combination, until all cases in which they
are right have been Placed side by side with
all cases in which they are wrong. In this
way they have examples, and are made to learn
that each letter in every combination is
always the same and not another, and is always
called by the same name.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Certainly.
STRANGER: Are not examples formed in this
manner? We take a thing and compare it with
another distinct instance of the same thing,
of which we have a right conception, and
out of the comparison there arises one true
notion, which includes both of them.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Exactly.
STRANGER: Can we wonder, then, that the soul
has the same uncertainty about the alphabet
of things, and sometimes and in some cases
is firmly fixed by the truth in each particular,
and then, again, in other cases is altogether
at sea; having somehow or other a correction
of combinations; but when the elements are
transferred into the long and difficult language
(syllables) of facts, is again ignorant of
them?
YOUNG SOCRATES: There is nothing wonderful
in that.
STRANGER: Could any one, my friend, who began
with false opinion ever expect to arrive
even at a small portion of truth and to attain
wisdom?
YOUNG SOCRATES: Hardly.
STRANGER: Then you and I will not be far
wrong in trying to see the nature of example
in general in a small and particular instance;
afterwards from lesser things we intend to
pass to the royal class, which is the highest
form of the same nature, and endeavour to
discover by rules of art what the management
of cities is; and then the dream will become
a reality to us.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Very true.
STRANGER: Then, once more, let us resume
the previous argument, and as there were
innumerable rivals of the royal race who
claim to have the care of states, let us
part them all off, and leave him alone; and,
as I was saying, a model or example of this
process has first to be framed.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Exactly.
STRANGER: What model is there which is small,
and yet has any analogy with the political
occupation? Suppose, Socrates, that if we
have no other example at hand, we choose
weaving, or, more precisely, weaving of wool-this
will be quite enough, without taking the
whole of weaving, to illustrate our meaning?
YOUNG SOCRATES: Certainly.
STRANGER: Why should we not apply to weaving
the same processes of division and subdivision
which we have already applied to other classes;
going once more as rapidly as we can through
all the steps until we come to that which
is needed for our purpose?
YOUNG SOCRATES: How do you mean?
STRANGER: I shall reply by actually performing
the process.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Very good.
STRANGER: All things which we make or acquire
are either creative or preventive; of the
preventive class are antidotes, divine and
human, and also defences; and defences are
either military weapons or protections; and
protections are veils, and also shields against
heat and cold, and shields against heat and
cold are shelters and coverings; and coverings
are blankets and garments; and garments are
some of them in one piece, and others of
them are made in several parts; and of these
latter some are stitched, others are fastened
and not stitched; and of the not stitched,
some are made of the sinews of plants, and
some of hair; and of these, again, some are
cemented with water and earth, and others
are fastened together by themselves. And
these last defences and coverings which are
fastened together by themselves are called
clothes, and the art which superintends them
we may call, from the nature of the operation,
the art of clothing, just as before the art
of the Statesman was derived from the State;
and may we not say that the art of weaving,
at least that largest portion of it which
was concerned with the making of clothes,
differs only in name from this art of clothing,
in the same way that, in the previous case,
the royal science differed from the political?
YOUNG SOCRATES: Most true.
STRANGER: In the next place, let us make
the reflection, that the art of weaving clothes,
which an incompetent person might fancy to
have been sufficiently described, has been
separated off from several others which are
of the same family, but not from the co-operative
arts.
YOUNG SOCRATES: And which are the kindred
arts?
STRANGER: I see that I have not taken you
with me. So I think that we had better go
backwards, starting from the end. We just
now parted off from the weaving of clothes,
the making of blankets, which differ from
each other in that one is put under and the
other is put around! and these are what I
termed kindred arts.
YOUNG SOCRATES: I understand.
STRANGER: And we have subtracted the manufacture
of all articles made of flax and cords, and
all that we just now metaphorically termed
the sinews of plants, and we have also separated
off the process of felting and the putting
together of materials by stitching and sewing,
of which the most important part is the cobbler's
art.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Precisely.
STRANGER: Then we separated off the currier's
art, which prepared coverings in entire pieces,
and the art of sheltering, and subtracted
the various arts of making water-tight which
are employed in building, and in general
in carpentering, and in other crafts, and
all such arts as furnish impediments to thieving
and acts of violence, and are concerned with
making the lids of boxes and the fixing of
doors, being divisions of the art of joining;
and we also cut off the manufacture of arms,
which is a section of the great and manifold
art of making defences; and we originally
began by parting off the whole of the magic
art which is concerned with antidoter, and
have left, as would appear, the very art
of which we were in search, the art of protection
against winter cold, which fabricates woollen
defences, and has the name of weaving.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Very true.
STRANGER: Yes, my boy, but that is not all;
for the first process to which the material
is subjected is the opposite of weaving.
YOUNG SOCRATES: How so?
STRANGER: Weaving is a sort of uniting?
YOUNG SOCRATES: Yes.
STRANGER: But the first process is a separation
of the clotted and matted fibres?
YOUNG SOCRATES: What do you mean?
STRANGER: I mean the work of the carder's
art; for we cannot say that carding is weaving,
or that the carder is a weaver.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Certainly not.
STRANGER: Again, if a person were to say
that the art of making the warp and the woof
was the art of weaving, he would say what
was paradoxical and false.
YOUNG SOCRATES: To be sure.
STRANGER: Shall we say that the whole art
of the fuller or of the mender has nothing
to do with the care and treatment clotes,
or are we to regard all these as arts of
weaving?
YOUNG SOCRATES: Certainly not.
STRANGER: And yet surely all these arts will
maintain that they are concerned with the
treatment and production of clothes; they
will dispute the exclusive prerogative of
weaving, and though assigning a larger sphere
to that, will still reserve a considerable
field for themselves.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Very true.
STRANGER: Besides these, there are the arts
which make tools and instruments of weaving,
and which will claim at least to be cooperative
causes in every work of the weaver.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Most true.
STRANGER: Well, then, suppose that we define
weaving, or rather that part of it which
has been selected by us, to be the greatest
and noblest of arts which are concerned with
woollen garments-shall we be right? Is not
the definition, although true, wanting in
clearness and completeness; for do not all
those other arts require to be first cleared
away?
YOUNG SOCRATES: True.
STRANGER: Then the next thing will be to
separate them, in order that the argument
may proceed in a regular manner?
YOUNG SOCRATES: By all means.
STRANGER: Let us consider, in the first place,
that there are two kinds of arts entering
into everything which we do.
YOUNG SOCRATES: What are they?
STRANGER: The one kind is the conditional
or cooperative, the other the principal cause.
YOUNG SOCRATES: What do you mean?
STRANGER: The arts which do not manufacture
the actual thing, but which furnish the necessary
tools for the manufacture, without which
the several arts could not fulfil their appointed
work, are co-operative; but those which make
the things themselves are causal.
YOUNG SOCRATES: A very reasonable distinction.
STRANGER: Thus the arts which make spindles,
combs, and other instruments of the production
of clothes may be called co-operative, and
those which treat and fabricate the things
themselves, causal.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Very true.
STRANGER: The arts of washing and mending,
and the other preparatory arts which belong
to the causal class, and form a division
of the great art of adornment, may be all
comprehended under what we call the fuller's
art.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Very good.
STRANGER: Carding and spinning threads and
all the parts of the process which are concerned
with the actual manufacture of a woollen
garment form a single art, which is one of
thow universally acknowledged-the art of
working in wool.
YOUNG SOCRATES: To be sure.
STRANGER: Of working in wool again, there
are two divisions, and both these are parts
of two arts at once.
YOUNG SOCRATES: How is that?
STRANGER: Carding and one half of the use
of the comb, and the other processes of wool-working
which separate the composite, may be classed
together as belonging both to the art of
woolworking, and also to one of the two great
arts which are of universal application-the
art of composition and the art of division.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Yes.
STRANGER: To the latter belong carding and
the other processes of which I was just now
speaking the art of discernment or division
in wool and yarn, which is effected in one
manner with the comb and in another with
the hands, is variously described under all
the names which I just now mentioned.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Very true.
STRANGER: Again, let us take some process
of woolworking which is also a portion of
the art of composition, and, dismissing the
elements of division which we found there,
make two halves, one on the principle of
composition, and the other on the principle
of division.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Let that be done.
STRANGER: And once more, Socrates, we must
divide the part which belongs at once both
to woolworking and composition, if we are
ever to discover satisfactorily the aforesaid
art of weaving.
YOUNG SOCRATES: We must.
STRANGER: Yes, certainly, and let us call
one part of the art the art of twisting threads,
the other the art of combining them.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Do I understand you, in speaking
of twisting, to be referring to manufacture
of the warp?
STRANGER: Yes, and of the woof too; how,
if not by twisting, is the woof made?
YOUNG SOCRATES: There is no other way.
STRANGER: Then suppose that you define the
warp and the woof, for I think that the definition
will be of use to you.
YOUNG SOCRATES: How shall I define them?
STRANGER: As thus: A piece of carded wool
which is drawn out lengthwise and breadth-wise
is said to be pulled out.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Yes.
STRANGER: And the wool thus prepared when
twisted by the spindle, and made into a firm
thread, is called the warp, And the art which
regulates these operations the art of spinning
the warp.
YOUNG SOCRATES: True.
STRANGER: And the threads which are more
loosely spun, having a softness proportioned
to the intertexture of the warp and to the
degree of force used in dressing the cloth-the
threads which are thus spun are called the
woof, and the art which is set over them
may be called the art of spinning the woof.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Very true.
STRANGER: And, now, there can be no mistake
about the nature of the part of weaving which
we have undertaken to define. For when that
part of the art of composition which is employed
in the working of wool forms a web by the
regular intertexture of warp and woof, the
entire woven substance is called by us a
woollen garment, and the art which presides
over this is the art of weaving.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Very true.
STRANGER: But why did we not say at once
that weaving is the art of entwining warp
and woof, instead of making a long and useless
circuit?
YOUNG SOCRATES: I thought, Stranger, that
there was nothing useless in what was said.
STRANGER: Very likely, but you may not always
think so, my sweet friend; and in case any
feeling of dissatisfaction should hereafter
arise in your mind, as it very well may,
let me lay down a principle which will apply
to arguments in general.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Proceed.
STRANGER: Let us begin by considering the
whole nature of excess and defect, and then
we shall have a rational ground on which
we may praise or blame too much length or
too much shortness in discussions of this
kind.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Let us do so.
STRANGER: The points on which I think that
we ought to dwell are the following:-
YOUNG SOCRATES: What?
STRANGER: Length and shortness, excess and
defect; with all of these the art of measurement
is conversant.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Yes.
STRANGER: And the art of measurement has
to be divided into two parts, with a view
to our present purpose.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Where would you make the
division?
STRANGER: As thus: I would make two parts,
one having regard to the relativity of greatness
and smallness to each other; and there is
another, without which the existence of production
would be impossible.
YOUNG SOCRATES: What do you mean?
STRANGER: Do you not think that it is only
natural for the greater to be called greater
with reference to the less alone, and the
less reference to the greater alone?
YOUNG SOCRATES: Yes.
STRANGER: Well, but is there not also something
exceeding and exceeded by the principle of
the mean, both in speech and action, and
is not this a reality, and the chief mark
of difference between good and bad men?
YOUNG SOCRATES: Plainly.
STRANGER: Then we must suppose that the great
and small exist and are discerned in both
these ways, and not, as we were saying before,
only relatively to one another, but there
must also be another comparison of them with
the mean or ideal standard; would you like
to hear the reason why?
YOUNG SOCRATES: Certainly.
STRANGER: If we assume the greater to exist
only in relation to the less, there will
never be any comparison of either with the
mean.
YOUNG SOCRATES: True.
STRANGER: And would not this doctrine be
the ruin of all the arts and their creations;
would not the art of the Statesman and the
aforesaid art of weaving disappear? For all
these arts are on the watch against excess
and defect, not as unrealities, but as real
evils, which occasion a difficulty in action;
and the excellence of beauty of every work
of art is due to this observance of measure.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Certainly.
STRANGER: But if the science of the Statesman
disappears, the search for the royal science
will be impossible.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Very true.
STRANGER: Well, then, as in the case of the
Sophist we extorted the inference that not-being
had an existence, because here was the point
at which the argument eluded our grasp, so
in this we must endeavour to show that the
greater and, less are not only to be measured
with one another, but also have to do with
the production of the mean; for if this is
not admitted, neither a statesman nor any
other man of action can be an undisputed
master of his science.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Yes, we must certainly do
again what we did then.
STRANGER: But this, Socrates, is a greater
work than the other, of which we only too
well remember the length. I think, however,
that we may fairly assume something of this
sort-
YOUNG SOCRATES: What?
STRANGER: That we shall some day require
this notion of a mean with a view to the
demonstration of absolute truth; meanwhile,
the argument that the very existence of the
arts must be held to depend on the possibility
of measuring more or less, not only with
one another, but also with a view to the
attainment of the mean, seems to afford a
grand support and satisfactory proof of the
doctrine which we are maintaining; for if
there are arts, there is a standard of measure,
and if there is a standard of measure, there
are arts; but if either is wanting, there
is neither.
YOUNG SOCRATES: True; and what is the next
step?
STRANGER: The next step clearly is to divide
the art of measurement into two parts, all
we have said already, and to place in the
one part all the arts which measure number,
length, depth, breadth, swiftness with their
opposites; and to have another part in which
they are measured with the mean, and the
fit, and the opportune, and the due, and
with all those words, in short, which denote
a mean or standard removed from the extremes.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Here are two vast divisions,
embracing two very different spheres.
STRANGER: There are many accomplished men,
Socrates, who say, believing themselves to
speak wisely, that the art of measurement
is universal, and has to do with all things.
And this means what we are now saying; for
all things which come within the province
of art do certainly in some sense partake
of measure. But these persons, because they
are not accustomed to distinguish classes
according to real forms, jumble together
two widely different things, relation to
one another, and to a standard, under the
idea that they are the same, and also fall
into the converse error of dividing other
things not according to their real parts.
Whereas the right way is, if a man has first
seen the unity of things, to go on with the
enquiry and not desist until he has found
all the differences contained in it which
form distinct classes; nor again should he
be able to rest contented with the manifold
diversities which are seen in a multitude
of things until he has comprehended all of
them that have any affinity within the bounds
of one similarity and embraced them within
the reality of a single kind. But we have
said enough on this head, and also of excess
and defect; we have only to bear in mind
that two divisions of the art of measurement
have been discovered which are concerned
with them, and not forget what they are.
YOUNG SOCRATES: We will not forget.
STRANGER: And now that this discussion is
completed, let us go on to consider another
question, which concerns not this argument
only but the conduct of such arguments in
general.
YOUNG SOCRATES: What is this new question?
STRANGER: Take the case of a child who is
engaged in learning his letters: when he
is asked what letters make up a word, should
we say that the question is intended to improve
his grammatical knowledge of that particular
word, or of all words?
YOUNG SOCRATES: Clearly, in order that he
may have a better knowledge of all words.
STRANGER: And is our enquiry about the Statesman
intended only to improve our knowledge of
politics, or our power of reasoning generally?
YOUNG SOCRATES: Clearly, as in the former
example, the purpose is general.
STRANGER: Still less would any rational man
seek to analyse the notion of weaving for
its own sake. But people seem to forget that
some things have sensible images, which are
readily known, and can be easily pointed
out when any one desires to answer an enquirer
without any trouble or argument; whereas
the greatest and highest truths have no outward
image of themselves visible to man, which
he who wishes to satisfy the soul of the
enquirer can adapt to the eye of sense, and
therefore we ought to train ourselves to
give and accept a rational account of them;
for immaterial things, which are the noblest
and greatest, are shown only in thought and
idea, and in no other way, and all that we
are now saying is said for the sake of them.
Moreover, there is always less difficulty
in fixing the mind on small matters than
on great.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Very good.
STRANGER: Let us call to mind the bearing
of all this.
YOUNG SOCRATES: What is it?
STRANGER: I wanted to get rid of any impression
of tediousness which we may have experienced
in the discussion about weaving, and the
reversal of the universe, and in the discussion
concerning the Sophist and the being of not-being.
I know that they were felt to be too long,
and I reproached myself with this, fearing
that they might be not only tedious but irrelevant;
and all that I have now said is only designed
to prevent the recurrence of any such disagreeables
for the future.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Very good. Will you proceed?
STRANGER: Then I would like to observe that
you and I, remembering what has been said,
should praise or blame the length or shortness
of discussions, not by comparing them with
one another, but with what is fitting, having
regard to the part of measurement, which,
as we said, was to be borne in mind.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Very true.
STRANGER: And yet, not everything is to be
judged even with a view to what is fitting;
for we should only want such a length as
is suited to give pleasure, if at all, as
a secondary matter; and reason tells us,
that we should be contented to make the ease
or rapidity of an enquiry, not our first,
but our second object; the first and highest
of all being to assert the great method of
division according to species-whether the
discourse be shorter or longer is not to
the point. No offence should be taken at
length, but the longer and shorter are to
be employed indifferently, according as either
of them is better calculated to sharpen the
wits of the auditors. Reason would also say
to him who censures the length of discourses
on such occasions and cannot away with their
circumlocution, that he should not be in
such a hurry to have done with them, when
he can only complain that they are tedious,
but he should prove that if they had been
shorter they would have made those who took
part in them better dialecticians, and more
capable of expressing the truth of things;
about any other praise and blame, he need
not trouble himself-he should pretend not
to hear them. But we have had enough of this,
as you will probably agree with me in thinking.
Let us return to our Statesman, and apply
to his case the aforesaid example of weaving.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Very good;-let us do as you
say.
STRANGER: The art of the king has been separated
from the similar arts of shepherds, and,
indeed, from all those which have to do with
herds at all. There still remain, however,
of the causal and co-operative arts those
which are immediately concerned with States,
and which must first be distinguished from
one another.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Very good.
STRANGER: You know that these arts cannot
easily be divided into two halves; the reason
will be very: evident as we proceed.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Then we had better do so.
STRANGER: We must carve them like a victim
into members or limbs, since we cannot bisect
them. For we certainly should divide everything
into as few parts as possible.
YOUNG SOCRATES: What is to be done in this
case?
STRANGER: What we did in the example of weaving-all
those arts which furnish the tools were regarded
by us as co-operative.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Yes.
STRANGER: So now, and with still more reason,
all arts which make any implement in a State,
whether great or small, may be regarded by
us as co-operative, for without them neither
State nor Statesmanship would be possible;
and yet we are not inclined to say that any
of them is a product of the kingly art.
YOUNG SOCRATES: No, indeed.
STRANGER: The task of separating this class
from others is not an easy one; for there
is plausibility in saying that anything in
the world is the instrument of doing something.
But there is another dass of possessions
in, a city, of which I have a word to say.
YOUNG SOCRATES: What class do you mean?
STRANGER: A class which may be described
as not having this power; that is to say,
not like an instrument, framed for production,
but designed for the preservation of that
which is produced.
YOUNG SOCRATES: To what do you refer?
STRANGER: To the class of vessels, as they
are comprehensively termed, which are constructed
for the preservation of things moist and
dry, of things prepared in the fire or out
of the fire; this is a very large class,
and has, if I am not mistaken, literally
nothing to do with the royal art of which
we are in search.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Certainly not.
STRANGER: There is also a third class of
possessions to be noted, different from these
and very extensive, moving or resting on
land or water, honourable and also dishonourable.
The whole of this class has one name, because
it is intended to be sat upon, being always
a seat for something.
YOUNG SOCRATES: What is it?
STRANGER: A vehicle, which is certainly not
the work of the Statesman, but of the carpenter,
potter, and coppersmith.
YOUNG SOCRATES: I understand.
STRANGER: And is there not a fourth class
which is again different, and in which most
of the things formerly mentioned are contained-every
kind of dress, most sorts of arms, walls
and enclosures, whether of earth or stone,
and ten thousand other thing? all of which
being made for the sake of defence, may be
truly called defences, and are for the most
part to be regarded as the work of the builder
or of the weaver, rather than of the Statesman.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Certainly.
STRANGER: Shall we add a fifth class, of
ornamentation and drawing, and of the imitations
produced, by drawing and music, which are
designed for amusement only, and may be fairly
comprehended under one name?
YOUNG SOCRATES: What is it?
STRANGER: Plaything is the name.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Certainly.
STRANGER: That one name may be fitly predicated
of all of them, for none of these things
have a serious purpose-amusement is their
sole aim.
YOUNG SOCRATES: That again I understand.
STRANGER: Then there is a class which provides
materials for all these, out of which and
in which the arts already mentioned fabricate
their works;-this manifold class, I say,
which is the creation and offspring of many
other arts, may I not rank sixth?
YOUNG SOCRATES: What do you mean?
STRANGER: I am referring to gold, silver,
and other metals, and all that wood-cutting
and shearing of every sort provides for the
art of carpentry and plaiting; and there
is the process of barking and stripping the
cuticle of plants, and the currier's art,
which strips off the skins of animals, and
other similar arts which manufacture corks
and papyri and cords, and provide for the
manufacture of composite species out of simple
kinds-the whole class may be termed the primitive
and simple possession of man, and with this
the kingly science has no concern at all.
YOUNG SOCRATES: True.
STRANGER: The provision of food and of all
other things which mingle their particles
with the particles of the human body; and
minister to the body, will form a seventh
class, which may be called by the general
term of nourishment, unless you have any
better name to offer. This, however, appertains
rather to the husbandman, huntsman, trainer,
doctor, cook, and is not to be assigned to
the Statesman's art.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Certainly not.
STRANGER: These seven classes include nearly
every description of property, with the exception
of tame animals. Consider;-there was the
original material, which ought to have been
placed first; next come instruments, vessels,
vehicles, defences, playthings, nourishment;
small things, which may be-included under
one of these-as for example, coins, seals
and stamps, are omitted, for they have not
in them the character of any larger kind
which includes them; but some of them may,
with a little forcing, be placed among ornaments,
and others may be made to harmonize with
the class of implements. The art of herding,
which has been already divided into parts,
will include all property in tame animals
except slaves.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Very true.
STRANGER: The class of slaves and ministers
only remains, and I suspect that in this
the real aspirants for the throne, who are
the rivals of the king in the formation of
the political web, will be discovered; just
as spinners, carders, and the rest of them,
were the rivals of the weaver. All the others,
who were termed co-operators, have been got
rid of among the occupations already mentioned,
and separated from the royal and political
science.
YOUNG SOCRATES: I agree.
STRANGER: Let us go a little nearer, in order
that we may be more certain of the complexion
of this remaining class.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Let us do so.
STRANGER: We shall find from our present
point of view that the greatest servants
are in a case and condition which is the
reverse of what we anticipated.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Who are they?
STRANGER: Those who have been purchased,
and have so become possessions; these are
unmistakably slaves, and certainly do not
claim royal science.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Certainly not.
STRANGER: Again, freemen who of their own
accord become the servants of the other classes
in a State, and who exchange and equalise
the products of husbandry and the other arts,
some sitting in the market-place, others
going from city to city by land or sea, and
giving money in exchange for money or for
other productions-the money-changer, the
merchant, the ship-owner, the retailer, will
not put in any claim to statecraft or politics?
YOUNG SOCRATES: No; unless, indeed, to the
politics of commerce.
STRANGER: But surely men whom we see acting
as hirelings and serfs, and too happy to
turn their hand to anything, will not profess
to share in royal science?
YOUNG SOCRATES: Certainly not.
STRANGER: But what would you say of some
other serviceable officials?
YOUNG SOCRATES: Who are they, and what services
do they perform?
STRANGER: There are heralds, and scribes
perfected by practice, and divers others
who have great skill in various sorts of
business connected with the government of
states-what shall we call them?
YOUNG SOCRATES: They are the officials, and
servants of the rulers, as you just now called
them, but not themselves rulers.
STRANGER: There may be something strange
in any servant pretending to be a ruler,
and yet I do not think that I could have
been dreaming when I imagined that the principal
claimants to political science would be found
somewhere in this neighbourhood.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Very true.
STRANGER: Well, let us draw nearer, and try
the claims of some who have not yet been
tested; in the first place, there are diviners,
who have a portion of servile or ministerial
science, and are thought to be the interpreters
of the gods to men.
YOUNG SOCRATES: True.
STRANGER: There is also the priestly class,
who, as the law declares, know how to give
the gods gifts from men in the form of sacrifices
which are acceptable to them, and to ask
on our behalf blessings in return from them.
Now both these are branches of the servile
or ministerial art.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Yes, clearly.
STRANGER: And here I think that we seem to
be getting on the right track; for the priest
and the diviner are swollen with pride and
prerogative, and they create an awful impression
of themselves by the magnitude of their enterprises;
in Egypt, the king himself is not allowed
to reign, unless he have priestly powers,
and if he should be of another class and
has thrust himself in, he must get enrolled
in the priesthood. In many parts of Hellas,
the duty of offering the most solemn propitiatory
sacrifices is assigned to the highest magistracies,
and here, at Athens, the most solemn and
national of the ancient sacrifices are supposed
to be celebrated by him who has been chosen
by lot to be the King Archon.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Precisely.
STRANGER: But who are these other kings and
priests elected by lot who now come into
view followed by their retainers and a vast
throng, as the former class disappears and
the scene changes?
YOUNG SOCRATES: Whom can you mean?
STRANGER: They are a strange crew.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Why strange?
STRANGER: A minute ago I thought that they
were animals of every tribe; for many of
them are like lions and centaurs, and many
more like satyrs and such weak and shifty
creatures;-Protean shapes quickly changing
into one another's forms and natures; and
now, Socrates, I begin to see who they are.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Who are they? You seem to
be gazing on some strange vision.
STRANGER: Yes; every one looks strange when
you do not know him; and just now I myself
fell into this mistake-at first sight, coming
suddenly upon him, I did not recognize the
politician and his troop.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Who is he?
STRANGER: The chief of Sophists and most
accomplished of wizards, who must at any
cost be separated from the true king or Statesman,
if we are ever to see daylight in the present
enquiry.
YOUNG SOCRATES: That is a hope not lightly
to be renounced.
STRANGER: Never, if I can help it; and, first,
let me ask you a question.
YOUNG SOCRATES: What?
STRANGER: Is not monarchy a recognized form
of government?
YOUNG SOCRATES: Yes.
STRANGER: And, after monarchy, next in order
comes the government of the few?
YOUNG SOCRATES: Of course.
STRANGER: Is not the third form of government
the rule of the multitude, which is called
by the name of democracy?
YOUNG SOCRATES: Certainly.
STRANGER: And do not these three expand in
a manner into five, producing out of themselves
two other names YOUNG SOCRATES: What are
they?
YOUNG SOCRATES: What are they?
STRANGER: There is a criterion of voluntary
and involuntary, poverty and riches, law
and the absence of law, which men now-a-days
apply to them; the two first they subdivide
accordingly, and ascribe to monarchy two
forms and two corresponding names, royalty
and tyranny.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Very true.
STRANGER: And the government of the few they
distinguish by the names of aristocracy and
oligarchy.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Certainly.
STRANGER: Democracy alone, whether rigidly
observing the laws or not, and whether the
multitude rule over the men of property with
their consent or against their consent, always
in ordinary language has the same name.
YOUNG SOCRATES: True.
STRANGER: But do you suppose that any form
of government which is defined by these characteristics
of the one, the few, or the many, of poverty
or wealth, of voluntary or compulsory submission,
of written law or the absence of law, can
be a right one?
YOUNG SOCRATES: Why not?
STRANGER: Reflect; and follow me.
YOUNG SOCRATES: In what direction?
STRANGER: Shall we abide by what we said
at first, or shall we retract our words?
YOUNG SOCRATES: To what do you refer?
STRANGER: If I am not mistaken, we said that
royal power was a science?
YOUNG SOCRATES: Yes.
STRANGER: And a science of a peculiar kind,
which was selected out of the rest as having
a character which is at once judicial and
authoritative?
YOUNG SOCRATES: Yes.
STRANGER: And there was one kind of authority
over lifeless things and another other living
animals; and so we proceeded in the division
step by step up to this point, not losing
the idea of science, but unable as yet to
determine the nature of the particular science?
YOUNG SOCRATES: True.
STRANGER: Hence we are led to observe that
the distinguishing principle of the State
cannot be the few or many, the voluntary
or involuntary, poverty or riches; but some
notion of science must enter into it, if
we are to be consistent with what has preceded.
YOUNG SOCRATES: And we must be consistent.
STRANGER: Well, then, in which of these various
forms of States may the science of government,
which is among the greatest of all sciences
and most difficult to acquire, be supposed
to reside? That we must discover, and then
we shall see who are the false politicians
who pretend to be politicians but are not,
although they persuade many, and shall separate
them from the wise king.
YOUNG SOCRATES: That, as the argument has
already intimated, will be our duty.
STRANGER: Do you think that the multitude
in a State can attain political science?
YOUNG SOCRATES: Impossible.
STRANGER: But, perhaps, in a city of a thousand
men, there would be a hundred, or say fifty,
who could?
YOUNG SOCRATES: In that case political science
would certainly be the easiest of all sciences;
there could not be found in a city of that
number as many really first-rate draught-players,
if judged by the standard of the rest of
Hellas, and there would certainly not be
as many kings. For kings we may truly call
those who possess royal science, whether
they rule or not, as was shown in the previous
argument.
STRANGER: Thank you for reminding me; and
the consequence is that any true form of
government can only be supposed to be the
government of one, two, or, at any rate,
of a few.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Certainly.
STRANGER: And these, whether they rule with
the will, or against the will of their subjects,
with written laws or. without written laws,
and whether they are poor or rich, and whatever
be the nature of their rule, must be supposed,
according to our present view, to rule on
some scientific principle; just as the physician,
whether he cures us against our will or with
our will, and whatever be his mode of treatment-incision,
burning, or the infliction of some other
pain-whether he practises out of a book or
not out of a book, and whether he be rich
or poor, whether he purges or reduces in
some other way, or even fattens his patients,
is a physician all the same, so long as he
exercises authority over them according to
rules of art, if he only does them good and
heals and saves them. And this we lay down
to be the only proper test of the art of
medicine, or of any other art of command.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Quite true.
STRANGER: Then that can be the only true
form of government in which the governors
are really found to possess science, and
are not mere pretenders, whether they rule
according to law or without law, over-willing
or unwilling subjects, and are rich or poor
themselves-none of these things can with
any propriety be included in the notion of
the ruler.
YOUNG SOCRATES: True.
STRANGER: And whether with a view to the
public good they purge the State by killing
some, or exiling some; whether they reduce
the size of the body corporate by sending
out from the hive swarms of citizens, or,
by introducing persons from without, increase
it; while they act according to the rules
of wisdom and justice, and use their power
with a view to the general security and improvement,
the city over which they rule, and which
has these characteristics, may be described
as the only true State. All other governments
are not genuine or real; but only imitations
of this, and some of them are better and
some of them are worse; the better are said
to be well governed, but they are mere imitations
like the others.
YOUNG SOCRATES: I agree, Stranger, in the
greater part of what you say; but as to their
ruling without laws-the expression has a
harsh sound.
STRANGER: You have been too quick for me,
Socrates; I was just going to ask you whether
you objected to any of my statements. And
now I see that we shall have to consider
this notion of there being good government
without laws.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Certainly.
STRANGER: There can be no doubt that legislation
is in a manner the business of a king, and
yet the best thing of all is not that the
law should rule, but that a man should rule,
supposing him to have wisdom and royal power.
Do you see why this is?
YOUNG SOCRATES: Why?
STRANGER: Because the law does not perfectly
comprehend what is noblest and most just
for all and therefore cannot enforce what
is best. The differences of men and actions,
and the endless irregular movements of human
things, do not admit of -any universal and
simple rule. And no art whatsoever can lay
down a rule which will last for all time.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Of course not.
STRANGER: But the law is always striving
to make one;-like an obstinate and ignorant
tyrant, who will not allow anything to be
done contrary to his appointment, or any
question to be asked-not even in sudden changes
of circumstances, when something happens
to be better than what he commanded for some
one.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Certainly; the law treats
us all precisely in the manner which you
describe.
STRANGER: A perfectly simple principle can
never be applied to a state of things which
is the reverse of simple.
YOUNG SOCRATES: True.
STRANGER: Then if the law is not the perfection
of right, why are we compelled to make laws
at all? The reason of this has next to be
investigated.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Certainly.
STRANGER: Let me ask, whether you have not
meetings for gymnastic contests in your city,
such as there are in other cities, at which
men compete in running, wrestling, and the
like?
YOUNG SOCRATES: Yes; they are very common
among us.
STRANGER: And what are the rules which are
enforced on their pupils by professional
trainers or by others having similar authority?
Can you remember?
YOUNG SOCRATES: To what do you refer?
STRANGER: The training-masters do not issue
minute rules for individuals, or give every
individual what is exactly suited to his
constitution; they think that they ought
to go more roughly to work, and to prescribe
generally the regimen, which will benefit
the majority.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Very true.
STRANGER: And therefore they assign equal
amounts of exercise to them all; they send
them forth together, and let them rest together
from their running, wrestling, or whatever
the form of bodily exercise may be.
Y. So True.
STRANGER: And now observe that the legislator
who has to preside over the herd, and to
enforce justice in their dealings with one
another, will not be able, in enacting for
the general good, to provide exactly what
is suitable for each particular case.
YOUNG SOCRATES: He cannot be expected to
do so.
STRANGER: He will lay down laws in a general
form for the majority, roughly meeting the
cases of individuals; and some of them he
will deliver in writing, and others will
be unwritten; and these last will be traditional
customs of the country.
YOUNG SOCRATES: He will be right.
STRANGER: Yes, quite right; for how can he
sit at every man's side all through his life,
prescribing for him the exact particulars
of his duty? Who, Socrates, would be equal
to such a task? No one who really had the
royal science, if he had been able to do
this, would have imposed upon himself the
restriction of a written law.
YOUNG SOCRATES: So I should infer from what
has now been said.
STRANGER: Or rather, my good friend, from
what is going to be said.
YOUNG SOCRATES: And what is that?
STRANGER: Let us put to ourselves the case
of a physician, or trainer, who is about
to go into a far country, and is expecting
to be a long time away from his patients-thinking
that his instructions will not be remembered
unless they are written down, he will leave
notes of them for the use of his pupils or
patients.
YOUNG SOCRATES: True.
STRANGER: But what would you say, if he came
back sooner than he had intended, and, owing
to an unexpected change of the winds or other
celestial influences, something else happened
to be better for them-would he not venture
to suggest this new remedy, although not
contemplated in his former prescription?
Would he persist in observing the original
law, neither himself giving any few commandments,
nor the patient daring to do otherwise than
was prescribed, under the idea that this
course only was healthy and medicinal, all
others noxious and heterodox? Viewed in the
light of science and true art, would not
all such enactments be utterly ridiculous?
YOUNG SOCRATES: Utterly.
STRANGER: And if he who gave laws, written
or unwritten, determining what was good or
bad, honourable or dishonourable, just or
unjust, to the tribes of men who flock together
in their several cities, and are governed
accordance with them; if, I say, the wise
legislator were suddenly to come again, or
another like to him, is he to be prohibited
from changing them?-would not this prohibition
be in reality quite as ridiculous as the
other?
YOUNG SOCRATES: Certainly.
STRANGER: Do you know a plausible saying
of the common people which is in point?
YOUNG SOCRATES: I do not recall what you
mean at the moment.
STRANGER: They say that if any one knows
how the ancient laws may be improved, he
must first persuade his own State of the
improvement, and then he may legislate, but
not otherwise.
YOUNG SOCRATES: And are they not right?
STRANGER: I dare say. But supposing that
he does use some gentle violence for their
good, what is this violence to be called?
Or rather, before you answer, let me ask
the same question in reference to our previous
instances.
YOUNG SOCRATES: What do you mean?
STRANGER: Suppose that a skilful physician
has a patient, of whatever sex or age, whom
he compels against his will to do something
for his good which is contrary to the written
rules; what is this compulsion to be called?
Would you ever dream of calling it a violation
of the art, or a breach of the laws of health?
Nothing could be more unjust than for the
patient to whom such violence is applied,
to charge the physician who practises the
violence with wanting skill or aggravating
his disease.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Most true.
STRANGER: In the political art error is not
called disease, but evil, or disgrace, or
injustice.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Quite true.
STRANGER: And when the citizen, contrary
to law and custom, is compelled to do what
is juster and better and nobler than he did
before, the last and most absurd thing which
he could say about such violence is that
he has incurred disgrace or evil or injustice
at the hands of those who compelled him.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Very true.
STRANGER: And shall we say that the violence,
if exercised by a rich man, is just, and
if by a poor man, unjust? May not any man,
rich or poor, with or without laws, with
the will of the citizens or against the will
of the citizens, do what is for their interest?
Is not this the true principle of government,
according to which the wise and good man
will order the affairs of his subjects? As
the pilot, by watching continually over the
interests of the ship and of the crew-not
by laying down rules, but by making his art
a law-preserves the lives of his fellow-sailors,
even and in the self-same way, may there
not be a true form of polity created by those
who are able to govern in a similar spirit,
and who show a strength of art which is superior
to the law? Nor can wise rulers ever err
while they, observing the one great rule
of distributing justice to the citizens with
intelligence and skill, are able to preserve
them, and, as far as may be, to make them
better from being worse.
YOUNG SOCRATES: No one can deny what has
been now said.
STRANGER: Neither, if you consider, can any
one deny the other statement.
YOUNG SOCRATES: What was it?
STRANGER: We said that no great number of
persons, whoever they may be, can attain
political knowledge, or order a State wisely,
but that the true government is to be found
in a small body, or in an individual, and
that other States are but imitations of this,
as we said a little while ago, some for the
better and some for the worse.
YOUNG SOCRATES: What do you mean? I cannot
have understood your previous remark about
imitations.
STRANGER: And yet the mere suggestion which
I hastily threw out is highly important,
even if we leave the question where it is,
and do not seek by the discussion of it to
expose the error which prevails in this matter.
YOUNG SOCRATES: What do you mean?
STRANGER: The idea which has to be grasped
by us is not easy or familiar; but we may
attempt to express it thus:-Supposing the
government of which I have been speaking
to be the only true model, then the others
must use the written laws of this-in no other
can they be saved; they will have to do what
is now generally approved, although not the
best thing in the world.
YOUNG SOCRATES: What is this?
STRANGER: No citizen should do anything contrary
to the laws, and any infringement of them
should be punished with death and the most
extreme penalties; and this is very right
and good when regarded as the second best
thing, if you set aside the first, of which
I was just now speaking. Shall I explain
the nature of what call the second best?
YOUNG SOCRATES: By all means.
STRANGER: I must again have recourse to my
favourite images; through them, and them
alone, can I describe kings and rulers.
YOUNG SOCRATES: What images?
STRANGER: The noble pilot and the wise physician,
who "is worth many another man"-in
the similitude of these let us endeavour
to discover some image of the king.
YOUNG SOCRATES: What sort of image?
STRANGER: Well, such as this:-Every man will
reflect that he suffers strange things at
the hands of both of them; the physician;
saves any whom he wishes to save, and any
whom he wishes to maltreat he maltreats-cutting
or burning them; and at the same time requiring
them to bring him patients, which are a sort
of tribute, of which little or nothing is
spent upon the sick man, and the greater
part is consumed by him and his domestics;
and the finale is that he receives money
from the relations of the sick man or from
some enemy of his; and puts him out of the
way. And the pilots of ships are guilty,
of numberless evil deeds of the same kind;
they intentionally play false and leave you
ashore when the hour of sailing arrives;
or they cause mishaps at sea and cast away
their freight; and are guilty of other rogueries.
Now suppose that we, bearing all this in
mind, were to determine, after consideration,
that neither of these arts shall any longer
be allowed to exercise absolute control either
over freemen or over slaves, but that we
will summon an assembly either of all the
people, or of the rich only, that anybody
who likes, whatever may be his calling, or
even if he have no calling, may offer an
opinion either about seamanship or about
diseases-whether as to the manner in which
physic or surgical instruments are to be
applied to the patient, or again about the
vessels and the nautical implements which
are required in navigation, and how to meet
the dangers of winds and waves which are
incidental to the voyage, how to behave when
encountering pirates, and what is to be done
with the old fashioned galleys, if they have
to fight with others of a similar build-and
that, whatever shall be decreed by the multitude
on these points, upon the advice of persons
skilled or unskilled, shall be written down
on triangular tablets and columns, or enacted
although unwritten to be national customs;
and that in all future time vessels shall
be navigated and remedies administered to
the patient after this fashion.
YOUNG SOCRATES: What a strange notion!
STRANGER: Suppose further, that the pilots
and physicians are appointed annually, either
out of the rich, or out of the whole people,
and that they are elected by lot; and that
after their election they navigate vessels
and heal the sick according to the written
rules.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Worse and worse.
STRANGER: But hear what follows:-When the
year of office has expired, the pilot or
physician has to come before a court of review,
in which the judges are either selected from
the wealthy classes or chosen by lot out
of the whole people; and anybody who pleases
may be their accuser, and may lay to their
charge, that during the past year they have
not navigated their vessels or healed their
patients according to the letter of the law
and the ancient customs of their ancestors;
and if either of them is condemned, some
of the judges must fix what he is to suffer
or pay.
YOUNG SOCRATES: He who is willing to take
a command under such conditions, deserves
to suffer any penalty.
STRANGER: Yet once more, we shall have to
enact that if any one is detected enquiring
into piloting and navigation, or into health
and the true nature of medicine, or about
the winds, or other conditions of the atmosphere,
contrary to the written rules, and has any
ingenious notions about such matters, he
is not to be called a pilot or physician,
but a cloudy prating sophist;-further, on
the ground that he is a corrupter of the
young, who would persuade them. to follow
the art of medicine or piloting in an unlawful
manner, and to exercise an arbitrary rule
over their patients or ships, any one who
is qualified by law may inform against him,
and indict him in some court, and then if
he is found to be persuading any, whether
young or old, to act contrary to the written
law, he is to be punished with the utmost
rigour; for no one should presume to be wiser
than the laws; and as touching healing and
health and piloting and navigation, the nature
of them is known to all, for anybody may
learn the written laws and the national customs.
If such were the mode of procedure, Socrates,
about these sciences and about generalship,
and any branch of hunting, or about painting
or imitation in general, or carpentry, or
any sort of handicraft, or husbandry, or
planting, or if we were to see an art of
rearing horses, or tending herds, or divination,
or any ministerial service, or draught-playing,
or any science conversant with number, whether
simple or square or cube, or comprising motion-I
say, if all these things were done in this
way according to written regulations, and
not according to art, what would be the result?
YOUNG SOCRATES: All the arts would utterly
perish, and could never be recovered, because
enquiry would be unlawful. And human life,
which is bad enough already, would then become
utterly unendurable.
STRANGER: But what, if while compelling all
these operations to be regulated by written
law, we were to appoint as the guardian of
the laws some one elected by a show of hands,
or by lot, and he caring nothing about the
laws, were to act contrary to them from motives
of interest or favour, and without knowledge-would
not this be a still worse evil than the former?
YOUNG SOCRATES: Very true.
STRANGER: To go against the laws, which are
based upon long experience, and the wisdom
of counsellors who have graciously recommended
them and persuaded the multitude to pass
them, would be a far greater and more ruinous
error than any adherence to written law?
YOUNG SOCRATES: Certainly.
STRANGER: Therefore, as there is a danger
of this, the next best thing in legislating
is not to allow either the individual or
the multitude to break the law in any respect
whatever.
YOUNG SOCRATES: True.
STRANGER: The laws would be copies of the
true particulars of action as far as they
admit of being written down from the lips
of those who have knowledge?
YOUNG SOCRATES: Certainly they would.
STRANGER: And, as we were saying, he who
has knowledge and is a true Statesman, will
do many things within his own sphere of action
by his art without regard to the laws, when
he is of opinion that something other than
that which he has written down and enjoined
to be observed during his absence would be
better.
YOUNG SOCRATES: Yes, we said so.
STRANGER: And any
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