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INTRODUCTION.
The Phaedrus is
closely connected with the Symposium, and may be regarded either as
introducing or following it. The two Dialogues together contain the
whole philosophy of Plato on the nature of love, which in the Republic
and in the later writings of Plato is only introduced playfully or as a
figure of speech. But in the Phaedrus and Symposium love and philosophy
join hands, and one is an aspect of the other. The spiritual and
emotional part is elevated into the ideal, to which in the Symposium
mankind are described as looking forward, and which in the Phaedrus, as
well as in the Phaedo, they are seeking to recover from a former state
of existence. Whether the subject of the Dialogue is love or rhetoric,
or the union of the two, or the relation of philosophy to love and to
art in general, and to the human soul, will be hereafter considered. And
perhaps we may arrive at some conclusion such as the following—that the
dialogue is not strictly confined to a single subject, but passes from
one to another with the natural freedom of conversation.
Phaedrus has been
spending the morning with Lysias, the celebrated rhetorician, and is
going to refresh himself by taking a walk outside the wall, when he is
met by Socrates, who professes that he will not leave him until he has
delivered up the speech with which Lysias has regaled him, and which he
is carrying about in his mind, or more probably in a book hidden under
his cloak, and is intending to study as he walks. The imputation is not
denied, and the two agree to direct their steps out of the public way
along the stream of the Ilissus towards a plane-tree which is seen in
the distance. There, lying down amidst pleasant sounds and scents, they
will read the speech of Lysias. The country is a novelty to Socrates,
who never goes out of the town; and hence he is full of admiration for
the beauties of nature, which he seems to be drinking in for the first
time.
As they are on
their way, Phaedrus asks the opinion of Socrates respecting the local
tradition of Boreas and Oreithyia. Socrates, after a satirical allusion
to the 'rationalizers' of his day, replies that he has no time for these
'nice' interpretations of mythology, and he pities anyone who has. When
you once begin there is no end of them, and they spring from an
uncritical philosophy after all. 'The proper study of mankind is man;'
and he is a far more complex and wonderful being than the serpent Typho.
Socrates as yet does not know himself; and why should he care to know
about unearthly monsters? Engaged in such conversation, they arrive at
the plane-tree; when they have found a convenient resting-place,
Phaedrus pulls out the speech and reads:—
The speech
consists of a foolish paradox which is to the effect that the non-lover
ought to be accepted rather than the lover—because he is more rational,
more agreeable, more enduring, less suspicious, less hurtful, less
boastful, less engrossing, and because there are more of them, and for a
great many other reasons which are equally unmeaning. Phaedrus is
captivated with the beauty of the periods, and wants to make Socrates
say that nothing was or ever could be written better. Socrates does not
think much of the matter, but then he has only attended to the form, and
in that he has detected several repetitions and other marks of haste. He
cannot agree with Phaedrus in the extreme value which he sets upon this
performance, because he is afraid of doing injustice to Anacreon and
Sappho and other great writers, and is almost inclined to think that he
himself, or rather some power residing within him, could make a speech
better than that of Lysias on the same theme, and also different from
his, if he may be allowed the use of a few commonplaces which all
speakers must equally employ.
Phaedrus is
delighted at the prospect of having another speech, and promises that he
will set up a golden statue of Socrates at Delphi, if he keeps his word.
Some raillery ensues, and at length Socrates, conquered by the threat
that he shall never again hear a speech of Lysias unless he fulfils his
promise, veils his face and begins.
First, invoking
the Muses and assuming ironically the person of the non-lover (who is a
lover all the same), he will enquire into the nature and power of love.
For this is a necessary preliminary to the other question—How is the
non-lover to be distinguished from the lover? In all of us there are two
principles—a better and a worse—reason and desire, which are generally
at war with one another; and the victory of the rational is called
temperance, and the victory of the irrational intemperance or excess.
The latter takes many forms and has many bad names—gluttony,
drunkenness, and the like. But of all the irrational desires or excesses
the greatest is that which is led away by desires of a kindred nature to
the enjoyment of personal beauty. And this is the master power of love.
Here Socrates
fancies that he detects in himself an unusual flow of eloquence—this
newly-found gift he can only attribute to the inspiration of the place,
which appears to be dedicated to the nymphs. Starting again from the
philosophical basis which has been laid down, he proceeds to show how
many advantages the non-lover has over the lover. The one encourages
softness and effeminacy and exclusiveness; he cannot endure any
superiority in his beloved; he will train him in luxury, he will keep
him out of society, he will deprive him of parents, friends, money,
knowledge, and of every other good, that he may have him all to himself.
Then again his ways are not ways of pleasantness; he is mighty
disagreeable; 'crabbed age and youth cannot live together.' At every
hour of the night and day he is intruding upon him; there is the same
old withered face and the remainder to match—and he is always repeating,
in season or out of season, the praises or dispraises of his beloved,
which are bad enough when he is sober, and published all over the world
when he is drunk. At length his love ceases; he is converted into an
enemy, and the spectacle may be seen of the lover running away from the
beloved, who pursues him with vain reproaches, and demands his reward
which the other refuses to pay. Too late the beloved learns, after all
his pains and disagreeables, that 'As wolves love lambs so lovers love
their loves.' (Compare Char.) Here is the end; the 'other' or
'non-lover' part of the speech had better be understood, for if in the
censure of the lover Socrates has broken out in verse, what will he not
do in his praise of the non-lover? He has said his say and is preparing
to go away.
Phaedrus begs him
to remain, at any rate until the heat of noon has passed; he would like
to have a little more conversation before they go. Socrates, who has
risen, recognizes the oracular sign which forbids him to depart until he
has done penance. His conscious has been awakened, and like Stesichorus
when he had reviled the lovely Helen he will sing a palinode for having
blasphemed the majesty of love. His palinode takes the form of a myth.
Socrates begins
his tale with a glorification of madness, which he divides into four
kinds: first, there is the art of divination or prophecy—this, in a vein
similar to that pervading the Cratylus and Io, he connects with madness
by an etymological explanation (mantike, manike—compare oionoistike,
oionistike, ''tis all one reckoning, save the phrase is a little
variations'); secondly, there is the art of purification by mysteries;
thirdly, poetry or the inspiration of the Muses (compare Ion), without
which no man can enter their temple. All this shows that madness is one
of heaven's blessings, and may sometimes be a great deal better than
sense. There is also a fourth kind of madness—that of love—which cannot
be explained without enquiring into the nature of the soul.
All soul is
immortal, for she is the source of all motion both in herself and in
others. Her form may be described in a figure as a composite nature made
up of a charioteer and a pair of winged steeds. The steeds of the gods
are immortal, but ours are one mortal and the other immortal. The
immortal soul soars upwards into the heavens, but the mortal drops her
plumes and settles upon the earth.
Now the use of the
wing is to rise and carry the downward element into the upper
world—there to behold beauty, wisdom, goodness, and the other things of
God by which the soul is nourished. On a certain day Zeus the lord of
heaven goes forth in a winged chariot; and an array of gods and demi-gods
and of human souls in their train, follows him. There are glorious and
blessed sights in the interior of heaven, and he who will may freely
behold them. The great vision of all is seen at the feast of the gods,
when they ascend the heights of the empyrean—all but Hestia, who is left
at home to keep house. The chariots of the gods glide readily upwards
and stand upon the outside; the revolution of the spheres carries them
round, and they have a vision of the world beyond. But the others labour
in vain; for the mortal steed, if he has not been properly trained,
keeps them down and sinks them towards the earth. Of the world which is
beyond the heavens, who can tell? There is an essence formless,
colourless, intangible, perceived by the mind only, dwelling in the
region of true knowledge. The divine mind in her revolution enjoys this
fair prospect, and beholds justice, temperance, and knowledge in their
everlasting essence. When fulfilled with the sight of them she returns
home, and the charioteer puts up the horses in their stable, and gives
them ambrosia to eat and nectar to drink. This is the life of the gods;
the human soul tries to reach the same heights, but hardly succeeds; and
sometimes the head of the charioteer rises above, and sometimes sinks
below, the fair vision, and he is at last obliged, after much
contention, to turn away and leave the plain of truth. But if the soul
has followed in the train of her god and once beheld truth she is
preserved from harm, and is carried round in the next revolution of the
spheres; and if always following, and always seeing the truth, is then
for ever unharmed. If, however, she drops her wings and falls to the
earth, then she takes the form of man, and the soul which has seen most
of the truth passes into a philosopher or lover; that which has seen
truth in the second degree, into a king or warrior; the third, into a
householder or money-maker; the fourth, into a gymnast; the fifth, into
a prophet or mystic; the sixth, into a poet or imitator; the seventh,
into a husbandman or craftsman; the eighth, into a sophist or demagogue;
the ninth, into a tyrant. All these are states of probation, wherein he
who lives righteously is improved, and he who lives unrighteously
deteriorates. After death comes the judgment; the bad depart to houses
of correction under the earth, the good to places of joy in heaven. When
a thousand years have elapsed the souls meet together and choose the
lives which they will lead for another period of existence. The soul
which three times in succession has chosen the life of a philosopher or
of a lover who is not without philosophy receives her wings at the close
of the third millennium; the remainder have to complete a cycle of ten
thousand years before their wings are restored to them. Each time there
is full liberty of choice. The soul of a man may descend into a beast,
and return again into the form of man. But the form of man will only be
taken by the soul which has once seen truth and acquired some conception
of the universal:—this is the recollection of the knowledge which she
attained when in the company of the Gods. And men in general recall only
with difficulty the things of another world, but the mind of the
philosopher has a better remembrance of them. For when he beholds the
visible beauty of earth his enraptured soul passes in thought to those
glorious sights of justice and wisdom and temperance and truth which she
once gazed upon in heaven. Then she celebrated holy mysteries and beheld
blessed apparitions shining in pure light, herself pure, and not as yet
entombed in the body. And still, like a bird eager to quit its cage, she
flutters and looks upwards, and is therefore deemed mad. Such a
recollection of past days she receives through sight, the keenest of our
senses, because beauty, alone of the ideas, has any representation on
earth: wisdom is invisible to mortal eyes. But the corrupted nature,
blindly excited by this vision of beauty, rushes on to enjoy, and would
fain wallow like a brute beast in sensual pleasures. Whereas the true
mystic, who has seen the many sights of bliss, when he beholds a
god-like form or face is amazed with delight, and if he were not afraid
of being thought mad he would fall down and worship. Then the stiffened
wing begins to relax and grow again; desire which has been imprisoned
pours over the soul of the lover; the germ of the wing unfolds, and
stings, and pangs of birth, like the cutting of teeth, are everywhere
felt. (Compare Symp.) Father and mother, and goods and laws and
proprieties are nothing to him; his beloved is his physician, who can
alone cure his pain. An apocryphal sacred writer says that the power
which thus works in him is by mortals called love, but the immortals
call him dove, or the winged one, in order to represent the force of his
wings—such at any rate is his nature. Now the characters of lovers
depend upon the god whom they followed in the other world; and they
choose their loves in this world accordingly. The followers of Ares are
fierce and violent; those of Zeus seek out some philosophical and
imperial nature; the attendants of Here find a royal love; and in like
manner the followers of every god seek a love who is like their god; and
to him they communicate the nature which they have received from their
god. The manner in which they take their love is as follows:—
I told you about
the charioteer and his two steeds, the one a noble animal who is guided
by word and admonition only, the other an ill-looking villain who will
hardly yield to blow or spur. Together all three, who are a figure of
the soul, approach the vision of love. And now a fierce conflict begins.
The ill-conditioned steed rushes on to enjoy, but the charioteer, who
beholds the beloved with awe, falls back in adoration, and forces both
the steeds on their haunches; again the evil steed rushes forwards and
pulls shamelessly. The conflict grows more and more severe; and at last
the charioteer, throwing himself backwards, forces the bit out of the
clenched teeth of the brute, and pulling harder than ever at the reins,
covers his tongue and jaws with blood, and forces him to rest his legs
and haunches with pain upon the ground. When this has happened several
times, the villain is tamed and humbled, and from that time forward the
soul of the lover follows the beloved in modesty and holy fear. And now
their bliss is consummated; the same image of love dwells in the breast
of either, and if they have self-control, they pass their lives in the
greatest happiness which is attainable by man—they continue masters of
themselves, and conquer in one of the three heavenly victories. But if
they choose the lower life of ambition they may still have a happy
destiny, though inferior, because they have not the approval of the
whole soul. At last they leave the body and proceed on their pilgrim's
progress, and those who have once begun can never go back. When the time
comes they receive their wings and fly away, and the lovers have the
same wings.
Socrates
concludes:—
These are the
blessings of love, and thus have I made my recantation in finer language
than before: I did so in order to please Phaedrus. If I said what was
wrong at first, please to attribute my error to Lysias, who ought to
study philosophy instead of rhetoric, and then he will not mislead his
disciple Phaedrus.
Phaedrus is afraid
that he will lose conceit of Lysias, and that Lysias will be out of
conceit with himself, and leave off making speeches, for the politicians
have been deriding him. Socrates is of opinion that there is small
danger of this; the politicians are themselves the great rhetoricians of
the age, who desire to attain immortality by the authorship of laws. And
therefore there is nothing with which they can reproach Lysias in being
a writer; but there may be disgrace in being a bad one.
And what is good
or bad writing or speaking? While the sun is hot in the sky above us,
let us ask that question: since by rational conversation man lives, and
not by the indulgence of bodily pleasures. And the grasshoppers who are
chirruping around may carry our words to the Muses, who are their
patronesses; for the grasshoppers were human beings themselves in a
world before the Muses, and when the Muses came they died of hunger for
the love of song. And they carry to them in heaven the report of those
who honour them on earth.
The first rule of
good speaking is to know and speak the truth; as a Spartan proverb says,
'true art is truth'; whereas rhetoric is an art of enchantment, which
makes things appear good and evil, like and unlike, as the speaker
pleases. Its use is not confined, as people commonly suppose, to
arguments in the law courts and speeches in the assembly; it is rather a
part of the art of disputation, under which are included both the rules
of Gorgias and the eristic of Zeno. But it is not wholly devoid of
truth. Superior knowledge enables us to deceive another by the help of
resemblances, and to escape from such a deception when employed against
ourselves. We see therefore that even in rhetoric an element of truth is
required. For if we do not know the truth, we can neither make the
gradual departures from truth by which men are most easily deceived, nor
guard ourselves against deception.
Socrates then
proposes that they shall use the two speeches as illustrations of the
art of rhetoric; first distinguishing between the debatable and
undisputed class of subjects. In the debatable class there ought to be a
definition of all disputed matters. But there was no such definition in
the speech of Lysias; nor is there any order or connection in his words
any more than in a nursery rhyme. With this he compares the regular
divisions of the other speech, which was his own (and yet not his own,
for the local deities must have inspired him). Although only a playful
composition, it will be found to embody two principles: first, that of
synthesis or the comprehension of parts in a whole; secondly, analysis,
or the resolution of the whole into parts. These are the processes of
division and generalization which are so dear to the dialectician, that
king of men. They are effected by dialectic, and not by rhetoric, of
which the remains are but scanty after order and arrangement have been
subtracted. There is nothing left but a heap of 'ologies' and other
technical terms invented by Polus, Theodorus, Evenus, Tisias, Gorgias,
and others, who have rules for everything, and who teach how to be short
or long at pleasure. Prodicus showed his good sense when he said that
there was a better thing than either to be short or long, which was to
be of convenient length.
Still,
notwithstanding the absurdities of Polus and others, rhetoric has great
power in public assemblies. This power, however, is not given by any
technical rules, but is the gift of genius. The real art is always being
confused by rhetoricians with the preliminaries of the art. The
perfection of oratory is like the perfection of anything else; natural
power must be aided by art. But the art is not that which is taught in
the schools of rhetoric; it is nearer akin to philosophy. Pericles, for
instance, who was the most accomplished of all speakers, derived his
eloquence not from rhetoric but from the philosophy of nature which he
learnt of Anaxagoras. True rhetoric is like medicine, and the
rhetorician has to consider the natures of men's souls as the physician
considers the natures of their bodies. Such and such persons are to be
affected in this way, such and such others in that; and he must know the
times and the seasons for saying this or that. This is not an easy task,
and this, if there be such an art, is the art of rhetoric.
I know that there
are some professors of the art who maintain probability to be stronger
than truth. But we maintain that probability is engendered by likeness
of the truth which can only be attained by the knowledge of it, and that
the aim of the good man should not be to please or persuade his
fellow-servants, but to please his good masters who are the gods.
Rhetoric has a fair beginning in this.
Enough of the art
of speaking; let us now proceed to consider the true use of writing.
There is an old Egyptian tale of Theuth, the inventor of writing,
showing his invention to the god Thamus, who told him that he would only
spoil men's memories and take away their understandings. From this tale,
of which young Athens will probably make fun, may be gathered the lesson
that writing is inferior to speech. For it is like a picture, which can
give no answer to a question, and has only a deceitful likeness of a
living creature. It has no power of adaptation, but uses the same words
for all. It is not a legitimate son of knowledge, but a bastard, and
when an attack is made upon this bastard neither parent nor anyone else
is there to defend it. The husbandman will not seriously incline to sow
his seed in such a hot-bed or garden of Adonis; he will rather sow in
the natural soil of the human soul which has depth of earth; and he will
anticipate the inner growth of the mind, by writing only, if at all, as
a remedy against old age. The natural process will be far nobler, and
will bring forth fruit in the minds of others as well as in his own.
The conclusion of
the whole matter is just this,—that until a man knows the truth, and the
manner of adapting the truth to the natures of other men, he cannot be a
good orator; also, that the living is better than the written word, and
that the principles of justice and truth when delivered by word of mouth
are the legitimate offspring of a man's own bosom, and their lawful
descendants take up their abode in others. Such an orator as he is who
is possessed of them, you and I would fain become. And to all composers
in the world, poets, orators, legislators, we hereby announce that if
their compositions are based upon these principles, then they are not
only poets, orators, legislators, but philosophers. All others are mere
flatterers and putters together of words. This is the message which
Phaedrus undertakes to carry to Lysias from the local deities, and
Socrates himself will carry a similar message to his favourite
Isocrates, whose future distinction as a great rhetorician he
prophesies. The heat of the day has passed, and after offering up a
prayer to Pan and the nymphs, Socrates and Phaedrus depart.
There are two
principal controversies which have been raised about the Phaedrus; the
first relates to the subject, the second to the date of the Dialogue.
There seems to be
a notion that the work of a great artist like Plato cannot fail in
unity, and that the unity of a dialogue requires a single subject. But
the conception of unity really applies in very different degrees and
ways to different kinds of art; to a statue, for example, far more than
to any kind of literary composition, and to some species of literature
far more than to others. Nor does the dialogue appear to be a style of
composition in which the requirement of unity is most stringent; nor
should the idea of unity derived from one sort of art be hastily
transferred to another. The double titles of several of the Platonic
Dialogues are a further proof that the severer rule was not observed by
Plato. The Republic is divided between the search after justice and the
construction of the ideal state; the Parmenides between the criticism of
the Platonic ideas and of the Eleatic one or being; the Gorgias between
the art of speaking and the nature of the good; the Sophist between the
detection of the Sophist and the correlation of ideas. The Theaetetus,
the Politicus, and the Philebus have also digressions which are but
remotely connected with the main subject.
Thus the
comparison of Plato's other writings, as well as the reason of the
thing, lead us to the conclusion that we must not expect to find one
idea pervading a whole work, but one, two, or more, as the invention of
the writer may suggest, or his fancy wander. If each dialogue were
confined to the development of a single idea, this would appear on the
face of the dialogue, nor could any controversy be raised as to whether
the Phaedrus treated of love or rhetoric. But the truth is that Plato
subjects himself to no rule of this sort. Like every great artist he
gives unity of form to the different and apparently distracting topics
which he brings together. He works freely and is not to be supposed to
have arranged every part of the dialogue before he begins to write. He
fastens or weaves together the frame of his discourse loosely and
imperfectly, and which is the warp and which is the woof cannot always
be determined.
The subjects of
the Phaedrus (exclusive of the short introductory passage about
mythology which is suggested by the local tradition) are first the false
or conventional art of rhetoric; secondly, love or the inspiration of
beauty and knowledge, which is described as madness; thirdly, dialectic
or the art of composition and division; fourthly, the true rhetoric,
which is based upon dialectic, and is neither the art of persuasion nor
knowledge of the truth alone, but the art of persuasion founded on
knowledge of truth and knowledge of character; fifthly, the superiority
of the spoken over the written word. The continuous thread which appears
and reappears throughout is rhetoric; this is the ground into which the
rest of the Dialogue is worked, in parts embroidered with fine words
which are not in Socrates' manner, as he says, 'in order to please
Phaedrus.' The speech of Lysias which has thrown Phaedrus into an
ecstacy is adduced as an example of the false rhetoric; the first speech
of Socrates, though an improvement, partakes of the same character; his
second speech, which is full of that higher element said to have been
learned of Anaxagoras by Pericles, and which in the midst of poetry does
not forget order, is an illustration of the higher or true rhetoric.
This higher rhetoric is based upon dialectic, and dialectic is a sort of
inspiration akin to love (compare Symp.); in these two aspects of
philosophy the technicalities of rhetoric are absorbed. And so the
example becomes also the deeper theme of discourse. The true knowledge
of things in heaven and earth is based upon enthusiasm or love of the
ideas going before us and ever present to us in this world and in
another; and the true order of speech or writing proceeds accordingly.
Love, again, has three degrees: first, of interested love corresponding
to the conventionalities of rhetoric; secondly, of disinterested or mad
love, fixed on objects of sense, and answering, perhaps, to poetry;
thirdly, of disinterested love directed towards the unseen, answering to
dialectic or the science of the ideas. Lastly, the art of rhetoric in
the lower sense is found to rest on a knowledge of the natures and
characters of men, which Socrates at the commencement of the Dialogue
has described as his own peculiar study.
Thus amid discord
a harmony begins to appear; there are many links of connection which are
not visible at first sight. At the same time the Phaedrus, although one
of the most beautiful of the Platonic Dialogues, is also more irregular
than any other. For insight into the world, for sustained irony, for
depth of thought, there is no Dialogue superior, or perhaps equal to it.
Nevertheless the form of the work has tended to obscure some of Plato's
higher aims.
The first speech
is composed 'in that balanced style in which the wise love to talk'
(Symp.). The characteristics of rhetoric are insipidity, mannerism, and
monotonous parallelism of clauses. There is more rhythm than reason; the
creative power of imagination is wanting.
''Tis Greece, but
living Greece no more.'
Plato has seized
by anticipation the spirit which hung over Greek literature for a
thousand years afterwards. Yet doubtless there were some who, like
Phaedrus, felt a delight in the harmonious cadence and the pedantic
reasoning of the rhetoricians newly imported from Sicily, which had
ceased to be awakened in them by really great works, such as the odes of
Anacreon or Sappho or the orations of Pericles. That the first speech
was really written by Lysias is improbable. Like the poem of Solon, or
the story of Thamus and Theuth, or the funeral oration of Aspasia (if
genuine), or the pretence of Socrates in the Cratylus that his knowledge
of philology is derived from Euthyphro, the invention is really due to
the imagination of Plato, and may be compared to the parodies of the
Sophists in the Protagoras. Numerous fictions of this sort occur in the
Dialogues, and the gravity of Plato has sometimes imposed upon his
commentators. The introduction of a considerable writing of another
would seem not to be in keeping with a great work of art, and has no
parallel elsewhere.
In the second
speech Socrates is exhibited as beating the rhetoricians at their own
weapons; he 'an unpractised man and they masters of the art.' True to
his character, he must, however, profess that the speech which he makes
is not his own, for he knows nothing of himself. (Compare Symp.)
Regarded as a rhetorical exercise, the superiority of his speech seems
to consist chiefly in a better arrangement of the topics; he begins with
a definition of love, and he gives weight to his words by going back to
general maxims; a lesser merit is the greater liveliness of Socrates,
which hurries him into verse and relieves the monotony of the style.
But Plato had
doubtless a higher purpose than to exhibit Socrates as the rival or
superior of the Athenian rhetoricians. Even in the speech of Lysias
there is a germ of truth, and this is further developed in the parallel
oration of Socrates. First, passionate love is overthrown by the
sophistical or interested, and then both yield to that higher view of
love which is afterwards revealed to us. The extreme of commonplace is
contrasted with the most ideal and imaginative of speculations.
Socrates, half in jest and to satisfy his own wild humour, takes the
disguise of Lysias, but he is also in profound earnest and in a deeper
vein of irony than usual. Having improvised his own speech, which is
based upon the model of the preceding, he condemns them both. Yet the
condemnation is not to be taken seriously, for he is evidently trying to
express an aspect of the truth. To understand him, we must make
abstraction of morality and of the Greek manner of regarding the
relation of the sexes. In this, as in his other discussions about love,
what Plato says of the loves of men must be transferred to the loves of
women before we can attach any serious meaning to his words. Had he
lived in our times he would have made the transposition himself. But
seeing in his own age the impossibility of woman being the intellectual
helpmate or friend of man (except in the rare instances of a Diotima or
an Aspasia), seeing that, even as to personal beauty, her place was
taken by young mankind instead of womankind, he tries to work out the
problem of love without regard to the distinctions of nature. And full
of the evils which he recognized as flowing from the spurious form of
love, he proceeds with a deep meaning, though partly in joke, to show
that the 'non-lover's' love is better than the 'lover's.'
We may raise the
same question in another form: Is marriage preferable with or without
love? 'Among ourselves,' as we may say, a little parodying the words of
Pausanias in the Symposium, 'there would be one answer to this question:
the practice and feeling of some foreign countries appears to be more
doubtful.' Suppose a modern Socrates, in defiance of the received
notions of society and the sentimental literature of the day, alone
against all the writers and readers of novels, to suggest this enquiry,
would not the younger 'part of the world be ready to take off its coat
and run at him might and main?' (Republic.) Yet, if like Peisthetaerus
in Aristophanes, he could persuade the 'birds' to hear him, retiring a
little behind a rampart, not of pots and dishes, but of unreadable
books, he might have something to say for himself. Might he not argue,
'that a rational being should not follow the dictates of passion in the
most important act of his or her life'? Who would willingly enter into a
contract at first sight, almost without thought, against the advice and
opinion of his friends, at a time when he acknowledges that he is not in
his right mind? And yet they are praised by the authors of romances, who
reject the warnings of their friends or parents, rather than those who
listen to them in such matters. Two inexperienced persons, ignorant of
the world and of one another, how can they be said to choose?—they draw
lots, whence also the saying, 'marriage is a lottery.' Then he would
describe their way of life after marriage; how they monopolize one
another's affections to the exclusion of friends and relations: how they
pass their days in unmeaning fondness or trivial conversation; how the
inferior of the two drags the other down to his or her level; how the
cares of a family 'breed meanness in their souls.' In the fulfilment of
military or public duties, they are not helpers but hinderers of one
another: they cannot undertake any noble enterprise, such as makes the
names of men and women famous, from domestic considerations. Too late
their eyes are opened; they were taken unawares and desire to part
company. Better, he would say, a 'little love at the beginning,' for
heaven might have increased it; but now their foolish fondness has
changed into mutual dislike. In the days of their honeymoon they never
understood that they must provide against offences, that they must have
interests, that they must learn the art of living as well as loving. Our
misogamist will not appeal to Anacreon or Sappho for a confirmation of
his view, but to the universal experience of mankind. How much nobler,
in conclusion, he will say, is friendship, which does not receive
unmeaning praises from novelists and poets, is not exacting or
exclusive, is not impaired by familiarity, is much less expensive, is
not so likely to take offence, seldom changes, and may be dissolved from
time to time without the assistance of the courts. Besides, he will
remark that there is a much greater choice of friends than of wives—you
may have more of them and they will be far more improving to your mind.
They will not keep you dawdling at home, or dancing attendance upon
them; or withdraw you from the great world and stirring scenes of life
and action which would make a man of you.
In such a manner,
turning the seamy side outwards, a modern Socrates might describe the
evils of married and domestic life. They are evils which mankind in
general have agreed to conceal, partly because they are compensated by
greater goods. Socrates or Archilochus would soon have to sing a
palinode for the injustice done to lovely Helen, or some misfortune
worse than blindness might be fall them. Then they would take up their
parable again and say:—that there were two loves, a higher and a lower,
holy and unholy, a love of the mind and a love of the body.
'Let
me not to the marriage of true minds
Admit impediments. Love is not love
Which alters when it alteration finds.
.....
Love's not time's fool, though rosy lips and cheeks
Within his bending sickle's compass come;
Love alters not with his brief hours and weeks,
But bears it out even to the edge of doom.'
But this true love
of the mind cannot exist between two souls, until they are purified from
the grossness of earthly passion: they must pass through a time of trial
and conflict first; in the language of religion they must be converted
or born again. Then they would see the world transformed into a scene of
heavenly beauty; a divine idea would accompany them in all their
thoughts and actions. Something too of the recollections of childhood
might float about them still; they might regain that old simplicity
which had been theirs in other days at their first entrance on life. And
although their love of one another was ever present to them, they would
acknowledge also a higher love of duty and of God, which united them.
And their happiness would depend upon their preserving in them this
principle—not losing the ideals of justice and holiness and truth, but
renewing them at the fountain of light. When they have attained to this
exalted state, let them marry (something too may be conceded to the
animal nature of man): or live together in holy and innocent friendship.
The poet might describe in eloquent words the nature of such a union;
how after many struggles the true love was found: how the two passed
their lives together in the service of God and man; how their characters
were reflected upon one another, and seemed to grow more like year by
year; how they read in one another's eyes the thoughts, wishes, actions
of the other; how they saw each other in God; how in a figure they grew
wings like doves, and were 'ready to fly away together and be at rest.'
And lastly, he might tell how, after a time at no long intervals, first
one and then the other fell asleep, and 'appeared to the unwise' to die,
but were reunited in another state of being, in which they saw justice
and holiness and truth, not according to the imperfect copies of them
which are found in this world, but justice absolute in existence
absolute, and so of the rest. And they would hold converse not only with
each other, but with blessed souls everywhere; and would be employed in
the service of God, every soul fulfilling his own nature and character,
and would see into the wonders of earth and heaven, and trace the works
of creation to their author.
So, partly in jest
but also 'with a certain degree of seriousness,' we may appropriate to
ourselves the words of Plato. The use of such a parody, though very
imperfect, is to transfer his thoughts to our sphere of religion and
feeling, to bring him nearer to us and us to him. Like the Scriptures,
Plato admits of endless applications, if we allow for the difference of
times and manners; and we lose the better half of him when we regard his
Dialogues merely as literary compositions. Any ancient work which is
worth reading has a practical and speculative as well as a literary
interest. And in Plato, more than in any other Greek writer, the local
and transitory is inextricably blended with what is spiritual and
eternal. Socrates is necessarily ironical; for he has to withdraw from
the received opinions and beliefs of mankind. We cannot separate the
transitory from the permanent; nor can we translate the language of
irony into that of plain reflection and common sense. But we can imagine
the mind of Socrates in another age and country; and we can interpret
him by analogy with reference to the errors and prejudices which prevail
among ourselves. To return to the Phaedrus:—
Both speeches are
strongly condemned by Socrates as sinful and blasphemous towards the god
Love, and as worthy only of some haunt of sailors to which good manners
were unknown. The meaning of this and other wild language to the same
effect, which is introduced by way of contrast to the formality of the
two speeches (Socrates has a sense of relief when he has escaped from
the trammels of rhetoric), seems to be that the two speeches proceed
upon the supposition that love is and ought to be interested, and that
no such thing as a real or disinterested passion, which would be at the
same time lasting, could be conceived. 'But did I call this "love"? O
God, forgive my blasphemy. This is not love. Rather it is the love of
the world. But there is another kingdom of love, a kingdom not of this
world, divine, eternal. And this other love I will now show you in a
mystery.'
Then follows the
famous myth, which is a sort of parable, and like other parables ought
not to receive too minute an interpretation. In all such allegories
there is a great deal which is merely ornamental, and the interpreter
has to separate the important from the unimportant. Socrates himself has
given the right clue when, in using his own discourse afterwards as the
text for his examination of rhetoric, he characterizes it as a 'partly
true and tolerably credible mythus,' in which amid poetical figures,
order and arrangement were not forgotten.
The soul is
described in magnificent language as the self-moved and the source of
motion in all other things. This is the philosophical theme or proem of
the whole. But ideas must be given through something, and under the
pretext that to realize the true nature of the soul would be not only
tedious but impossible, we at once pass on to describe the souls of gods
as well as men under the figure of two winged steeds and a charioteer.
No connection is traced between the soul as the great motive power and
the triple soul which is thus imaged. There is no difficulty in seeing
that the charioteer represents the reason, or that the black horse is
the symbol of the sensual or concupiscent element of human nature. The
white horse also represents rational impulse, but the description, 'a
lover of honour and modesty and temperance, and a follower of true
glory,' though similar, does not at once recall the 'spirit' (thumos) of
the Republic. The two steeds really correspond in a figure more nearly
to the appetitive and moral or semi-rational soul of Aristotle. And
thus, for the first time perhaps in the history of philosophy, we have
represented to us the threefold division of psychology. The image of the
charioteer and the steeds has been compared with a similar image which
occurs in the verses of Parmenides; but it is important to remark that
the horses of Parmenides have no allegorical meaning, and that the poet
is only describing his own approach in a chariot to the regions of light
and the house of the goddess of truth.
The triple soul
has had a previous existence, in which following in the train of some
god, from whom she derived her character, she beheld partially and
imperfectly the vision of absolute truth. All her after existence,
passed in many forms of men and animals, is spent in regaining this. The
stages of the conflict are many and various; and she is sorely let and
hindered by the animal desires of the inferior or concupiscent steed.
Again and again she beholds the flashing beauty of the beloved. But
before that vision can be finally enjoyed the animal desires must be
subjected.
The moral or
spiritual element in man is represented by the immortal steed which,
like thumos in the Republic, always sides with the reason. Both are
dragged out of their course by the furious impulses of desire. In the
end something is conceded to the desires, after they have been finally
humbled and overpowered. And yet the way of philosophy, or perfect love
of the unseen, is total abstinence from bodily delights. 'But all men
cannot receive this saying': in the lower life of ambition they may be
taken off their guard and stoop to folly unawares, and then, although
they do not attain to the highest bliss, yet if they have once conquered
they may be happy enough.
The language of
the Meno and the Phaedo as well as of the Phaedrus seems to show that at
one time of his life Plato was quite serious in maintaining a former
state of existence. His mission was to realize the abstract; in that,
all good and truth, all the hopes of this and another life seemed to
centre. To him abstractions, as we call them, were another kind of
knowledge—an inner and unseen world, which seemed to exist far more
truly than the fleeting objects of sense which were without him. When we
are once able to imagine the intense power which abstract ideas
exercised over the mind of Plato, we see that there was no more
difficulty to him in realizing the eternal existence of them and of the
human minds which were associated with them, in the past and future than
in the present. The difficulty was not how they could exist, but how
they could fail to exist. In the attempt to regain this 'saving'
knowledge of the ideas, the sense was found to be as great an enemy as
the desires; and hence two things which to us seem quite distinct are
inextricably blended in the representation of Plato.
Thus far we may
believe that Plato was serious in his conception of the soul as a motive
power, in his reminiscence of a former state of being, in his elevation
of the reason over sense and passion, and perhaps in his doctrine of
transmigration. Was he equally serious in the rest? For example, are we
to attribute his tripartite division of the soul to the gods? Or is this
merely assigned to them by way of parallelism with men? The latter is
the more probable; for the horses of the gods are both white, i.e. their
every impulse is in harmony with reason; their dualism, on the other
hand, only carries out the figure of the chariot. Is he serious, again,
in regarding love as 'a madness'? That seems to arise out of the
antithesis to the former conception of love. At the same time he appears
to intimate here, as in the Ion, Apology, Meno, and elsewhere, that
there is a faculty in man, whether to be termed in modern language
genius, or inspiration, or imagination, or idealism, or communion with
God, which cannot be reduced to rule and measure. Perhaps, too, he is
ironically repeating the common language of mankind about philosophy,
and is turning their jest into a sort of earnest. (Compare Phaedo, Symp.)
Or is he serious in holding that each soul bears the character of a god?
He may have had no other account to give of the differences of human
characters to which he afterwards refers. Or, again, in his absurd
derivation of mantike and oionistike and imeros (compare Cratylus)? It
is characteristic of the irony of Socrates to mix up sense and nonsense
in such a way that no exact line can be drawn between them. And allegory
helps to increase this sort of confusion.
As is often the
case in the parables and prophecies of Scripture, the meaning is allowed
to break through the figure, and the details are not always consistent.
When the charioteers and their steeds stand upon the dome of heaven they
behold the intangible invisible essences which are not objects of sight.
This is because the force of language can no further go. Nor can we
dwell much on the circumstance, that at the completion of ten thousand
years all are to return to the place from whence they came; because he
represents their return as dependent on their own good conduct in the
successive stages of existence. Nor again can we attribute anything to
the accidental inference which would also follow, that even a tyrant may
live righteously in the condition of life to which fate has called him
('he aiblins might, I dinna ken'). But to suppose this would be at
variance with Plato himself and with Greek notions generally. He is much
more serious in distinguishing men from animals by their recognition of
the universal which they have known in a former state, and in denying
that this gift of reason can ever be obliterated or lost. In the
language of some modern theologians he might be said to maintain the
'final perseverance' of those who have entered on their pilgrim's
progress. Other intimations of a 'metaphysic' or 'theology' of the
future may also be discerned in him: (1) The moderate predestinarianism
which here, as in the Republic, acknowledges the element of chance in
human life, and yet asserts the freedom and responsibility of man; (2)
The recognition of a moral as well as an intellectual principle in man
under the image of an immortal steed; (3) The notion that the divine
nature exists by the contemplation of ideas of virtue and justice—or, in
other words, the assertion of the essentially moral nature of God; (4)
Again, there is the hint that human life is a life of aspiration only,
and that the true ideal is not to be found in art; (5) There occurs the
first trace of the distinction between necessary and contingent matter;
(6) The conception of the soul itself as the motive power and reason of
the universe.
The conception of
the philosopher, or the philosopher and lover in one, as a sort of
madman, may be compared with the Republic and Theaetetus, in both of
which the philosopher is regarded as a stranger and monster upon the
earth. The whole myth, like the other myths of Plato, describes in a
figure things which are beyond the range of human faculties, or
inaccessible to the knowledge of the age. That philosophy should be
represented as the inspiration of love is a conception that has already
become familiar to us in the Symposium, and is the expression partly of
Plato's enthusiasm for the idea, and is also an indication of the real
power exercised by the passion of friendship over the mind of the Greek.
The master in the art of love knew that there was a mystery in these
feelings and their associations, and especially in the contrast of the
sensible and permanent which is afforded by them; and he sought to
explain this, as he explained universal ideas, by a reference to a
former state of existence. The capriciousness of love is also derived by
him from an attachment to some god in a former world. The singular
remark that the beloved is more affected than the lover at the final
consummation of their love, seems likewise to hint at a psychological
truth.
It is difficult to
exhaust the meanings of a work like the Phaedrus, which indicates so
much more than it expresses; and is full of inconsistencies and
ambiguities which were not perceived by Plato himself. For example, when
he is speaking of the soul does he mean the human or the divine soul?
and are they both equally self-moving and constructed on the same
threefold principle? We should certainly be disposed to reply that the
self-motive is to be attributed to God only; and on the other hand that
the appetitive and passionate elements have no place in His nature. So
we should infer from the reason of the thing, but there is no indication
in Plato's own writings that this was his meaning. Or, again, when he
explains the different characters of men by referring them back to the
nature of the God whom they served in a former state of existence, we
are inclined to ask whether he is serious: Is he not rather using a
mythological figure, here as elsewhere, to draw a veil over things which
are beyond the limits of mortal knowledge? Once more, in speaking of
beauty is he really thinking of some external form such as might have
been expressed in the works of Phidias or Praxiteles; and not rather of
an imaginary beauty, of a sort which extinguishes rather than stimulates
vulgar love,—a heavenly beauty like that which flashed from time to time
before the eyes of Dante or Bunyan? Surely the latter. But it would be
idle to reconcile all the details of the passage: it is a picture, not a
system, and a picture which is for the greater part an allegory, and an
allegory which allows the meaning to come through. The image of the
charioteer and his steeds is placed side by side with the absolute forms
of justice, temperance, and the like, which are abstract ideas only, and
which are seen with the eye of the soul in her heavenly journey. The
first impression of such a passage, in which no attempt is made to
separate the substance from the form, is far truer than an elaborate
philosophical analysis.
It is too often
forgotten that the whole of the second discourse of Socrates is only an
allegory, or figure of speech. For this reason, it is unnecessary to
enquire whether the love of which Plato speaks is the love of men or of
women. It is really a general idea which includes both, and in which the
sensual element, though not wholly eradicated, is reduced to order and
measure. We must not attribute a meaning to every fanciful detail. Nor
is there any need to call up revolting associations, which as a matter
of good taste should be banished, and which were far enough away from
the mind of Plato. These and similar passages should be interpreted by
the Laws. Nor is there anything in the Symposium, or in the Charmides,
in reality inconsistent with the sterner rule which Plato lays down in
the Laws. At the same time it is not to be denied that love and
philosophy are described by Socrates in figures of speech which would
not be used in Christian times; or that nameless vices were prevalent at
Athens and in other Greek cities; or that friendships between men were a
more sacred tie, and had a more important social and educational
influence than among ourselves. (See note on Symposium.)
In the Phaedrus,
as well as in the Symposium, there are two kinds of love, a lower and a
higher, the one answering to the natural wants of the animal, the other
rising above them and contemplating with religious awe the forms of
justice, temperance, holiness, yet finding them also 'too dazzling
bright for mortal eye,' and shrinking from them in amazement. The
opposition between these two kinds of love may be compared to the
opposition between the flesh and the spirit in the Epistles of St. Paul.
It would be unmeaning to suppose that Plato, in describing the spiritual
combat, in which the rational soul is finally victor and master of both
the steeds, condescends to allow any indulgence of unnatural lusts.
Two other thoughts
about love are suggested by this passage. First of all, love is
represented here, as in the Symposium, as one of the great powers of
nature, which takes many forms and two principal ones, having a
predominant influence over the lives of men. And these two, though
opposed, are not absolutely separated the one from the other. Plato,
with his great knowledge of human nature, was well aware how easily one
is transformed into the other, or how soon the noble but fleeting
aspiration may return into the nature of the animal, while the lower
instinct which is latent always remains. The intermediate
sentimentalism, which has exercised so great an influence on the
literature of modern Europe, had no place in the classical times of
Hellas; the higher love, of which Plato speaks, is the subject, not of
poetry or fiction, but of philosophy.
Secondly, there
seems to be indicated a natural yearning of the human mind that the
great ideas of justice, temperance, wisdom, should be expressed in some
form of visible beauty, like the absolute purity and goodness which
Christian art has sought to realize in the person of the Madonna. But
although human nature has often attempted to represent outwardly what
can be only 'spiritually discerned,' men feel that in pictures and
images, whether painted or carved, or described in words only, we have
not the substance but the shadow of the truth which is in heaven. There
is no reason to suppose that in the fairest works of Greek art, Plato
ever conceived himself to behold an image, however faint, of ideal
truths. 'Not in that way was wisdom seen.'
We may now pass on
to the second part of the Dialogue, which is a criticism on the first.
Rhetoric is assailed on various grounds: first, as desiring to persuade,
without a knowledge of the truth; and secondly, as ignoring the
distinction between certain and probable matter. The three speeches are
then passed in review: the first of them has no definition of the nature
of love, and no order in the topics (being in these respects far
inferior to the second); while the third of them is found (though a
fancy of the hour) to be framed upon real dialectical principles. But
dialectic is not rhetoric; nothing on that subject is to be found in the
endless treatises of rhetoric, however prolific in hard names. When
Plato has sufficiently put them to the test of ridicule he touches, as
with the point of a needle, the real error, which is the confusion of
preliminary knowledge with creative power. No attainments will provide
the speaker with genius; and the sort of attainments which can alone be
of any value are the higher philosophy and the power of psychological
analysis, which is given by dialectic, but not by the rules of the
rhetoricians.
In this latter
portion of the Dialogue there are many texts which may help us to speak
and to think. The names dialectic and rhetoric are passing out of use;
we hardly examine seriously into their nature and limits, and probably
the arts both of speaking and of conversation have been unduly neglected
by us. But the mind of Socrates pierces through the differences of times
and countries into the essential nature of man; and his words apply
equally to the modern world and to the Athenians of old. Would he not
have asked of us, or rather is he not asking of us, Whether we have
ceased to prefer appearances to reality? Let us take a survey of the
professions to which he refers and try them by his standard. Is not all
literature passing into criticism, just as Athenian literature in the
age of Plato was degenerating into sophistry and rhetoric? We can
discourse and write about poems and paintings, but we seem to have lost
the gift of creating them. Can we wonder that few of them 'come sweetly
from nature,' while ten thousand reviewers (mala murioi) are engaged in
dissecting them? Young men, like Phaedrus, are enamoured of their own
literary clique and have but a feeble sympathy with the master-minds of
former ages. They recognize 'a POETICAL necessity in the writings of
their favourite author, even when he boldly wrote off just what came in
his head.' They are beginning to think that Art is enough, just at the
time when Art is about to disappear from the world. And would not a
great painter, such as Michael Angelo, or a great poet, such as
Shakespeare, returning to earth, 'courteously rebuke' us—would he not
say that we are putting 'in the place of Art the preliminaries of Art,'
confusing Art the expression of mind and truth with Art the composition
of colours and forms; and perhaps he might more severely chastise some
of us for trying to invent 'a new shudder' instead of bringing to the
birth living and healthy creations? These he would regard as the signs
of an age wanting in original power.
Turning from
literature and the arts to law and politics, again we fall under the
lash of Socrates. For do we not often make 'the worse appear the better
cause;' and do not 'both parties sometimes agree to tell lies'? Is not
pleading 'an art of speaking unconnected with the truth'? There is
another text of Socrates which must not be forgotten in relation to this
subject. In the endless maze of English law is there any 'dividing the
whole into parts or reuniting the parts into a whole'—any semblance of
an organized being 'having hands and feet and other members'? Instead of
a system there is the Chaos of Anaxagoras (omou panta chremata) and no
Mind or Order. Then again in the noble art of politics, who thinks of
first principles and of true ideas? We avowedly follow not the truth but
the will of the many (compare Republic). Is not legislation too a sort
of literary effort, and might not statesmanship be described as the 'art
of enchanting' the house? While there are some politicians who have no
knowledge of the truth, but only of what is likely to be approved by
'the many who sit in judgment,' there are others who can give no form to
their ideal, neither having learned 'the art of persuasion,' nor having
any insight into the 'characters of men.' Once more, has not medical
science become a professional routine, which many 'practise without
being able to say who were their instructors'—the application of a few
drugs taken from a book instead of a life-long study of the natures and
constitutions of human beings? Do we see as clearly as Hippocrates 'that
the nature of the body can only be understood as a whole'? (Compare
Charm.) And are not they held to be the wisest physicians who have the
greatest distrust of their art? What would Socrates think of our
newspapers, of our theology? Perhaps he would be afraid to speak of
them;—the one vox populi, the other vox Dei, he might hesitate to attack
them; or he might trace a fanciful connexion between them, and ask
doubtfully, whether they are not equally inspired? He would remark that
we are always searching for a belief and deploring our unbelief, seeming
to prefer popular opinions unverified and contradictory to unpopular
truths which are assured to us by the most certain proofs: that our
preachers are in the habit of praising God 'without regard to truth and
falsehood, attributing to Him every species of greatness and glory,
saying that He is all this and the cause of all that, in order that we
may exhibit Him as the fairest and best of all' (Symp.) without any
consideration of His real nature and character or of the laws by which
He governs the world—seeking for a 'private judgment' and not for the
truth or 'God's judgment.' What would he say of the Church, which we
praise in like manner, 'meaning ourselves,' without regard to history or
experience? Might he not ask, whether we 'care more for the truth of
religion, or for the speaker and the country from which the truth
comes'? or, whether the 'select wise' are not 'the many' after all?
(Symp.) So we may fill up the sketch of Socrates, lest, as Phaedrus
says, the argument should be too 'abstract and barren of illustrations.'
(Compare Symp., Apol., Euthyphro.)
He next proceeds
with enthusiasm to define the royal art of dialectic as the power of
dividing a whole into parts, and of uniting the parts in a whole, and
which may also be regarded (compare Soph.) as the process of the mind
talking with herself. The latter view has probably led Plato to the
paradox that speech is superior to writing, in which he may seem also to
be doing an injustice to himself. For the two cannot be fairly compared
in the manner which Plato suggests. The contrast of the living and dead
word, and the example of Socrates, which he has represented in the form
of the Dialogue, seem to have misled him. For speech and writing have
really different functions; the one is more transitory, more diffuse,
more elastic and capable of adaptation to moods and times; the other is
more permanent, more concentrated, and is uttered not to this or that
person or audience, but to all the world. In the Politicus the paradox
is carried further; the mind or will of the king is preferred to the
written law; he is supposed to be the Law personified, the ideal made
Life.
Yet in both these
statements there is also contained a truth; they may be compared with
one another, and also with the other famous paradox, that 'knowledge
cannot be taught.' Socrates means to say, that what is truly written is
written in the soul, just as what is truly taught grows up in the soul
from within and is not forced upon it from without. When planted in a
congenial soil the little seed becomes a tree, and 'the birds of the air
build their nests in the branches.' There is an echo of this in the
prayer at the end of the Dialogue, 'Give me beauty in the inward soul,
and may the inward and outward man be at one.' We may further compare
the words of St. Paul, 'Written not on tables of stone, but on fleshly
tables of the heart;' and again, 'Ye are my epistles known and read of
all men.' There may be a use in writing as a preservative against the
forgetfulness of old age, but to live is higher far, to be ourselves the
book, or the epistle, the truth embodied in a person, the Word made
flesh. Something like this we may believe to have passed before Plato's
mind when he affirmed that speech was superior to writing. So in other
ages, weary of literature and criticism, of making many books, of
writing articles in reviews, some have desired to live more closely in
communion with their fellow-men, to speak heart to heart, to speak and
act only, and not to write, following the example of Socrates and of
Christ...
Some other touches
of inimitable grace and art and of the deepest wisdom may be also noted;
such as the prayer or 'collect' which has just been cited, 'Give me
beauty,' etc.; or 'the great name which belongs to God alone;' or 'the
saying of wiser men than ourselves that a man of sense should try to
please not his fellow-servants, but his good and noble masters,' like
St. Paul again; or the description of the 'heavenly originals'...
The chief criteria
for determining the date of the Dialogue are (1) the ages of Lysias and
Isocrates; (2) the character of the work.
Lysias was born in
the year 458; Isocrates in the year 436, about seven years before the
birth of Plato. The first of the two great rhetoricians is described as
in the zenith of his fame; the second is still young and full of
promise. Now it is argued that this must have been written in the youth
of Isocrates, when the promise was not yet fulfilled. And thus we should
have to assign the Dialogue to a year not later than 406, when Isocrates
was thirty and Plato twenty-three years of age, and while Socrates
himself was still alive.
Those who argue in
this way seem not to reflect how easily Plato can 'invent Egyptians or
anything else,' and how careless he is of historical truth or
probability. Who would suspect that the wise Critias, the virtuous
Charmides, had ended their lives among the thirty tyrants? Who would
imagine that Lysias, who is here assailed by Socrates, is the son of his
old friend Cephalus? Or that Isocrates himself is the enemy of Plato and
his school? No arguments can be drawn from the appropriateness or
inappropriateness of the characters of Plato. (Else, perhaps, it might
be further argued that, judging from their extant remains, insipid
rhetoric is far more characteristic of Isocrates than of Lysias.) But
Plato makes use of names which have often hardly any connection with the
historical characters to whom they belong. In this instance the
comparative favour shown to Isocrates may possibly be accounted for by
the circumstance of his belonging to the aristocratical, as Lysias to
the democratical party.
Few persons will
be inclined to suppose, in the superficial manner of some ancient
critics, that a dialogue which treats of love must necessarily have been
written in youth. As little weight can be attached to the argument that
Plato must have visited Egypt before he wrote the story of Theuth and
Thamus. For there is no real proof that he ever went to Egypt; and even
if he did, he might have known or invented Egyptian traditions before he
went there. The late date of the Phaedrus will have to be established by
other arguments than these: the maturity of the thought, the perfection
of the style, the insight, the relation to the other Platonic Dialogues,
seem to contradict the notion that it could have been the work of a
youth of twenty or twenty-three years of age. The cosmological notion of
the mind as the primum mobile, and the admission of impulse into the
immortal nature, also afford grounds for assigning a later date.
(Compare Tim., Soph., Laws.) Add to this that the picture of Socrates,
though in some lesser particulars,—e.g. his going without sandals, his
habit of remaining within the walls, his emphatic declaration that his
study is human nature,—an exact resemblance, is in the main the Platonic
and not the real Socrates. Can we suppose 'the young man to have told
such lies' about his master while he was still alive? Moreover, when two
Dialogues are so closely connected as the Phaedrus and Symposium, there
is great improbability in supposing that one of them was written at
least twenty years after the other. The conclusion seems to be, that the
Dialogue was written at some comparatively late but unknown period of
Plato's life, after he had deserted the purely Socratic point of view,
but before he had entered on the more abstract speculations of the
Sophist or the Philebus. Taking into account the divisions of the soul,
the doctrine of transmigration, the contemplative nature of the
philosophic life, and the character of the style, we shall not be far
wrong in placing the Phaedrus in the neighbourhood of the Republic;
remarking only that allowance must be made for the poetical element in
the Phaedrus, which, while falling short of the Republic in definite
philosophic results, seems to have glimpses of a truth beyond.
Two short
passages, which are unconnected with the main subject of the Dialogue,
may seem to merit a more particular notice: (1) the locus classicus
about mythology; (2) the tale of the grasshoppers.
The first passage
is remarkable as showing that Plato was entirely free from what may be
termed the Euhemerism of his age. For there were Euhemerists in Hellas
long before Euhemerus. Early philosophers, like Anaxagoras and
Metrodorus, had found in Homer and mythology hidden meanings. Plato,
with a truer instinct, rejects these attractive interpretations; he
regards the inventor of them as 'unfortunate;' and they draw a man off
from the knowledge of himself. There is a latent criticism, and also a
poetical sense in Plato, which enable him to discard them, and yet in
another way to make use of poetry and mythology as a vehicle of thought
and feeling. What would he have said of the discovery of Christian
doctrines in these old Greek legends? While acknowledging that such
interpretations are 'very nice,' would he not have remarked that they
are found in all sacred literatures? They cannot be tested by any
criterion of truth, or used to establish any truth; they add nothing to
the sum of human knowledge; they are—what we please, and if employed as
'peacemakers' between the new and old are liable to serious
misconstruction, as he elsewhere remarks (Republic). And therefore he
would have 'bid Farewell to them; the study of them would take up too
much of his time; and he has not as yet learned the true nature of
religion.' The 'sophistical' interest of Phaedrus, the little touch
about the two versions of the story, the ironical manner in which these
explanations are set aside—'the common opinion about them is enough for
me'—the allusion to the serpent Typho may be noted in passing; also the
general agreement between the tone of this speech and the remark of
Socrates which follows afterwards, 'I am a diviner, but a poor one.'
The tale of the
grasshoppers is naturally suggested by the surrounding scene. They are
also the representatives of the Athenians as children of the soil. Under
the image of the lively chirruping grasshoppers who inform the Muses in
heaven about those who honour them on earth, Plato intends to represent
an Athenian audience (tettigessin eoikotes). The story is introduced,
apparently, to mark a change of subject, and also, like several other
allusions which occur in the course of the Dialogue, in order to
preserve the scene in the recollection of the reader.
No one can duly
appreciate the dialogues of Plato, especially the Phaedrus, Symposium,
and portions of the Republic, who has not a sympathy with mysticism. To
the uninitiated, as he would himself have acknowledged, they will appear
to be the dreams of a poet who is disguised as a philosopher. There is a
twofold difficulty in apprehending this aspect of the Platonic writings.
First, we do not immediately realize that under the marble exterior of
Greek literature was concealed a soul thrilling with spiritual emotion.
Secondly, the forms or figures which the Platonic philosophy assumes,
are not like the images of the prophet Isaiah, or of the Apocalypse,
familiar to us in the days of our youth. By mysticism we mean, not the
extravagance of an erring fancy, but the concentration of reason in
feeling, the enthusiastic love of the good, the true, the one, the sense
of the infinity of knowledge and of the marvel of the human faculties.
When feeding upon such thoughts the 'wing of the soul' is renewed and
gains strength; she is raised above 'the manikins of earth' and their
opinions, waiting in wonder to know, and working with reverence to find
out what God in this or in another life may reveal to her.
ON THE DECLINE OF
GREEK LITERATURE.
One of the main
purposes of Plato in the Phaedrus is to satirize Rhetoric, or rather the
Professors of Rhetoric who swarmed at Athens in the fourth century
before Christ. As in the opening of the Dialogue he ridicules the
interpreters of mythology; as in the Protagoras he mocks at the
Sophists; as in the Euthydemus he makes fun of the word-splitting
Eristics; as in the Cratylus he ridicules the fancies of Etymologers; as
in the Meno and Gorgias and some other dialogues he makes reflections
and casts sly imputation upon the higher classes at Athens; so in the
Phaedrus, chiefly in the latter part, he aims his shafts at the
rhetoricians. The profession of rhetoric was the greatest and most
popular in Athens, necessary 'to a man's salvation,' or at any rate to
his attainment of wealth or power; but Plato finds nothing wholesome or
genuine in the purpose of it. It is a veritable 'sham,' having no
relation to fact, or to truth of any kind. It is antipathetic to him not
only as a philosopher, but also as a great writer. He cannot abide the
tricks of the rhetoricians, or the pedantries and mannerisms which they
introduce into speech and writing. He sees clearly how far removed they
are from the ways of simplicity and truth, and how ignorant of the very
elements of the art which they are professing to teach. The thing which
is most necessary of all, the knowledge of human nature, is hardly if at
all considered by them. The true rules of composition, which are very
few, are not to be found in their voluminous systems. Their
pretentiousness, their omniscience, their large fortunes, their
impatience of argument, their indifference to first principles, their
stupidity, their progresses through Hellas accompanied by a troop of
their disciples—these things were very distasteful to Plato, who
esteemed genius far above art, and was quite sensible of the interval
which separated them (Phaedrus). It is the interval which separates
Sophists and rhetoricians from ancient famous men and women such as
Homer and Hesiod, Anacreon and Sappho, Aeschylus and Sophocles; and the
Platonic Socrates is afraid that, if he approves the former, he will be
disowned by the latter. The spirit of rhetoric was soon to overspread
all Hellas; and Plato with prophetic insight may have seen, from afar,
the great literary waste or dead level, or interminable marsh, in which
Greek literature was soon to disappear. A similar vision of the decline
of the Greek drama and of the contrast of the old literature and the new
was present to the mind of Aristophanes after the death of the three
great tragedians (Frogs). After about a hundred, or at most two hundred
years if we exclude Homer, the genius of Hellas had ceased to flower or
blossom. The dreary waste which follows, beginning with the Alexandrian
writers and even before them in the platitudes of Isocrates and his
school, spreads over much more than a thousand years. And from this
decline the Greek language and literature, unlike the Latin, which has
come to life in new forms and been developed into the great European
languages, never recovered.
This monotony of
literature, without merit, without genius and without character, is a
phenomenon which deserves more attention than it has hitherto received;
it is a phenomenon unique in the literary history of the world. How
could there have been so much cultivation, so much diligence in writing,
and so little mind or real creative power? Why did a thousand years
invent nothing better than Sibylline books, Orphic poems, Byzantine
imitations of classical histories, Christian reproductions of Greek
plays, novels like the silly and obscene romances of Longus and
Heliodorus, innumerable forged epistles, a great many epigrams,
biographies of the meanest and most meagre description, a sham
philosophy which was the bastard progeny of the union between Hellas and
the East? Only in Plutarch, in Lucian, in Longinus, in the Roman
emperors Marcus Aurelius and Julian, in some of the Christian fathers
are there any traces of good sense or originality, or any power of
arousing the interest of later ages. And when new books ceased to be
written, why did hosts of grammarians and interpreters flock in, who
never attain to any sound notion either of grammar or interpretation?
Why did the physical sciences never arrive at any true knowledge or make
any real progress? Why did poetry droop and languish? Why did history
degenerate into fable? Why did words lose their power of expression? Why
were ages of external greatness and magnificence attended by all the
signs of decay in the human mind which are possible?
To these questions
many answers may be given, which if not the true causes, are at least to
be reckoned among the symptoms of the decline. There is the want of
method in physical science, the want of criticism in history, the want
of simplicity or delicacy in poetry, the want of political freedom,
which is the true atmosphere of public speaking, in oratory. The ways of
life were luxurious and commonplace. Philosophy had become extravagant,
eclectic, abstract, devoid of any real content. At length it ceased to
exist. It had spread words like plaster over the whole field of
knowledge. It had grown ascetic on one side, mystical on the other.
Neither of these tendencies was favourable to literature. There was no
sense of beauty either in language or in art. The Greek world became
vacant, barbaric, oriental. No one had anything new to say, or any
conviction of truth. The age had no remembrance of the past, no power of
understanding what other ages thought and felt. The Catholic faith had
degenerated into dogma and controversy. For more than a thousand years
not a single writer of first-rate, or even of second-rate, reputation
has a place in the innumerable rolls of Greek literature.
If we seek to go
deeper, we can still only describe the outward nature of the clouds or
darkness which were spread over the heavens during so many ages without
relief or light. We may say that this, like several other long periods
in the history of the human race, was destitute, or deprived of the
moral qualities which are the root of literary excellence. It had no
life or aspiration, no national or political force, no desire for
consistency, no love of knowledge for its own sake. It did not attempt
to pierce the mists which surrounded it. It did not propose to itself to
go forward and scale the heights of knowledge, but to go backwards and
seek at the beginning what can only be found towards the end. It was
lost in doubt and ignorance. It rested upon tradition and authority. It
had none of the higher play of fancy which creates poetry; and where
there is no true poetry, neither can there be any good prose. It had no
great characters, and therefore it had no great writers. It was
incapable of distinguishing between words and things. It was so
hopelessly below the ancient standard of classical Greek art and
literature that it had no power of understanding or of valuing them. It
is doubtful whether any Greek author was justly appreciated in antiquity
except by his own contemporaries; and this neglect of the great authors
of the past led to the disappearance of the larger part of them, while
the Greek fathers were mostly preserved. There is no reason to suppose
that, in the century before the taking of Constantinople, much more was
in existence than the scholars of the Renaissance carried away with them
to Italy.
The character of
Greek literature sank lower as time went on. It consisted more and more
of compilations, of scholia, of extracts, of commentaries, forgeries,
imitations. The commentator or interpreter had no conception of his
author as a whole, and very little of the context of any passage which
he was explaining. The least things were preferred by him to the
greatest. The question of a reading, or a grammatical form, or an
accent, or the uses of a word, took the place of the aim or subject of
the book. He had no sense of the beauties of an author, and very little
light is thrown by him on real difficulties. He interprets past ages by
his own. The greatest classical writers are the least appreciated by
him. This seems to be the reason why so many of them have perished, why
the lyric poets have almost wholly disappeared; why, out of the eighty
or ninety tragedies of Aeschylus and Sophocles, only seven of each had
been preserved.
Such an age of
sciolism and scholasticism may possibly once more get the better of the
literary world. There are those who prophesy that the signs of such a
day are again appearing among us, and that at the end of the present
century no writer of the first class will be still alive. They think
that the Muse of Literature may transfer herself to other countries less
dried up or worn out than our own. They seem to see the withering effect
of criticism on original genius. No one can doubt that such a decay or
decline of literature and of art seriously affects the manners and
character of a nation. It takes away half the joys and refinements of
life; it increases its dulness and grossness. Hence it becomes a matter
of great interest to consider how, if at all, such a degeneracy may be
averted. Is there any elixir which can restore life and youth to the
literature of a nation, or at any rate which can prevent it becoming
unmanned and enfeebled?
First there is the
progress of education. It is possible, and even probable, that the
extension of the means of knowledge over a wider area and to persons
living under new conditions may lead to many new combinations of thought
and language. But, as yet, experience does not favour the realization of
such a hope or promise. It may be truly answered that at present the
training of teachers and the methods of education are very imperfect,
and therefore that we cannot judge of the future by the present. When
more of our youth are trained in the best literatures, and in the best
parts of them, their minds may be expected to have a larger growth. They
will have more interests, more thoughts, more material for conversation;
they will have a higher standard and begin to think for themselves. The
number of persons who will have the opportunity of receiving the highest
education through the cheap press, and by the help of high schools and
colleges, may increase tenfold. It is likely that in every thousand
persons there is at least one who is far above the average in natural
capacity, but the seed which is in him dies for want of cultivation. It
has never had any stimulus to grow, or any field in which to blossom and
produce fruit. Here is a great reservoir or treasure-house of human
intelligence out of which new waters may flow and cover the earth. If at
any time the great men of the world should die out, and originality or
genius appear to suffer a partial eclipse, there is a boundless hope in
the multitude of intelligences for future generations. They may bring
gifts to men such as the world has never received before. They may begin
at a higher point and yet take with them all the results of the past.
The co-operation of many may have effects not less striking, though
different in character from those which the creative genius of a single
man, such as Bacon or Newton, formerly produced. There is also great
hope to be derived, not merely from the extension of education over a
wider area, but from the continuance of it during many generations.
Educated parents will have children fit to receive education; and these
again will grow up under circumstances far more favourable to the growth
of intelligence than any which have hitherto existed in our own or in
former ages.
Even if we were to
suppose no more men of genius to be produced, the great writers of
ancient or of modern times will remain to furnish abundant materials of
education to the coming generation. Now that every nation holds
communication with every other, we may truly say in a fuller sense than
formerly that 'the thoughts of men are widened with the process of the
suns.' They will not be 'cribbed, cabined, and confined' within a
province or an island. The East will provide elements of culture to the
West as well as the West to the East. The religions and literatures of
the world will be open books, which he who wills may read. The human
race may not be always ground down by bodily toil, but may have greater
leisure for the improvement of the mind. The increasing sense of the
greatness and infinity of nature will tend to awaken in men larger and
more liberal thoughts. The love of mankind may be the source of a
greater development of literature than nationality has ever been. There
may be a greater freedom from prejudice and party; we may better
understand the whereabouts of truth, and therefore there may be more
success and fewer failures in the search for it. Lastly, in the coming
ages we shall carry with us the recollection of the past, in which are
necessarily contained many seeds of revival and renaissance in the
future. So far is the world from becoming exhausted, so groundless is
the fear that literature will ever die out.
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