PLATO
CHARMIDES
360 BC IN TWO WEBPAGE PARTS - PART TWO
Translated by

Benjamin Jowett (1817-1893)
Benjamin Jowett (15 April 1817 - 1 October
1893) was an English scholar, classicist
and theologian. Noted as one of the greatest
British educators of the 19th century, he
was renowned for his translations of Plato
and as an outstanding and influential tutor.
He was Master of Balliol College, Oxford.
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Plato (Greek Plįton, "broad" 428/427
BC - 348/347 BC), was a Classical Greek philosopher,
mathematician, student of Socrates, writer
of philosophical dialogues, and founder of
the Academy in Athens, the first institution
of higher learning in the Western world.
Along with his mentor, Socrates, and his
student, Aristotle, Plato helped to lay the
foundations of Western philosophy and science.
Charmides, son of Glaucon, was an uncle of
Plato, the brother of his mother Perictione.
Based on Plato's Charmides, supposed to take
place upon Socrates' return from the siege
of Potidęa (Charmides, 153a), which lasted
from 432 till 429, in which Charmides is
presented as a teenager who couldn't have
been noticed by Socrates before his departure
to the war (Charmides, 154a), he might have
been born sometime between 445 and 440. He
was also a cousin of Critias, whose father
Callęschrus was a brother of his own father
Glaucon. Owing to these family ties, he became
a member of the aristocratic party, which
led him in 404 to become one of the Thirty
Tyrants along with his cousin Critias, who
was their leader. He died the next year in
the civil war that led to the restoration
of the democracy, during riots in Munychia,
in the suburbs of Athens (Xenophon, Hellenica,
II, 4, 19).
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Socrates Continues:
I think that he may.
And he who does so does his duty?
Yes.
And does not he who does his duty act temperately
or wisely?
Yes, he acts wisely.
But must the physician necessarily know when
his treatment is likely to prove beneficial,
and when not? or must the craftsman necessarily
know when he is likely to be benefited, and
when not to be benefited, by the work which
he is doing?
I suppose not.
Then, I said, he may sometimes do good or
harm, and not know what he is himself doing,
and yet, in doing good, as you say, he has
done temperately or wisely. Was not that
your statement?
Yes.
Then, as would seem, in doing good, he may
act wisely or temperately, and be wise or
temperate, but not know his own wisdom or
temperance?
But that, Socrates, he said, is impossible;
and therefore if this is, as you imply, the
necessary consequence of any of my previous
admissions, I will withdraw them, rather
than admit that a man can be temperate or
wise who does not know himself; and I am
not ashamed to confess that I was in error.
For self-knowledge would certainly be maintained
by me to be the very essence of knowledge,
and in this I agree with him who dedicated
the inscription, "Know thyself!"
at Delphi. That word, if I am not mistaken,
is put there as a sort of salutation which
the god addresses to those who enter the
temple; as much as to say that the ordinary
salutation of "Hail!" is not right,
and that the exhortation "Be temperate!"
would be a far better way of saluting one
another. The notion of him who dedicated
the inscription was, as I believe, that the
god speaks to those who enter his temple,
not as men speak; but, when a worshipper
enters, the first word which he hears is
"Be temperate!" This, however,
like a prophet he expresses in a sort of
riddle, for "Know thyself!" and
"Be temperate!" are the same, as
I maintain, and as the letters imply, and
yet they may be easily misunderstood; and
succeeding sages who added "Never too
much," or, "Give a pledge, and
evil is nigh at hand," would appear
to have so misunderstood them; for they imagined
that "Know thyself!" was a piece
of advice which the god gave, and not his
salutation of the worshippers at their first
coming in; and they dedicated their own inscription
under the idea that they too would give equally
useful pieces of advice. Shall I tell you,
Socrates, why I say all this? My object is
to leave the previous discussion
(in which I know not whether you or I are
more right, but, at any rate, no clear result
was attained), and to raise a new one in
which I will attempt to prove, if you deny,
that temperance is self-knowledge.
Yes, I said, Critias; but you come to me
as though I professed to know about the questions
which I ask, and as though I could, if I
only would, agree with you. Whereas the fact
is that I enquire with you into the truth
of that which is advanced from time to time,
just because I do not know; and when I have
enquired, I will say whether I agree with
you or not. Please then to allow me time
to reflect.
Reflect, he said.
I am reflecting, I replied, and discover
that temperance, or wisdom, if implying a
knowledge of anything, must be a science,
and a science of something.
Yes, he said; the science of itself.
Is not medicine, I said, the science of health?
True.
And suppose, I said, that I were asked by
you what is the use or effect of medicine,
which is this science of health, I should
answer that medicine is of very great use
in producing health, which, as you will admit,
is an excellent effect.
Granted.
And if you were to ask me, what is the result
or effect of architecture, which is the science
of building, I should say houses, and so
of other arts, which all have their different
results. Now I want you, Critias, to answer
a similar question about temperance, or wisdom,
which, according to you, is the science of
itself. Admitting this view, I ask of you,
what good work, worthy of the name wise,
does temperance or wisdom, which is the science
of itself, effect? Answer me.
That is not the true way of pursuing the
enquiry, Socrates, he said; for wisdom is
not like the other sciences, any more than
they are like one another: but you proceed
as if they were alike. For tell me, he said,
what result is there of computation or geometry,
in the same sense as a house is the result
of building, or a garment of weaving, or
any other work of any other art? Can you
show me any such result of them? You cannot.
That is true, I said; but still each of these
sciences has a subject which is different
from the science. I can show you that the
art of computation has to do with odd and
even numbers in their numerical relations
to themselves and to each other. Is not that
true?
Yes, he said.
And the odd and even numbers are not the
same with the art of computation?
They are not.
The art of weighing, again, has to do with
lighter and heavier; but the art of weighing
is one thing, and the heavy and the light
another. Do you admit that?
Yes.
Now, I want to know, what is that which is
not wisdom, and of which wisdom is the science?
You are just falling into the old error,
Socrates, he said. You come asking in what
wisdom or temperance differs from the other
sciences, and then you try to discover some
respect in which they are alike; but they
are not, for all the other sciences are of
something else, and not of themselves; wisdom
alone is a science of other sciences, and
of itself. And of this, as I believe, you
are very well aware: and that you are only
doing what you denied that you were doing
just now, trying to refute me, instead of
pursuing the argument.
And what if I am? How can you think that
I have any other motive in refuting you but
what I should have in examining into myself?
which motive would be just a fear of my unconsciously
fancying that I knew something of which I
was ignorant. And at this moment I pursue
the argument chiefly for my own sake, and
perhaps in some degree also for the sake
of my other friends. For is not the discovery
of things as they truly are, a good common
to all mankind?
Yes, certainly, Socrates, he said.
Then, I said, be cheerful, sweet sir, and
give your opinion in answer to the question
which I asked, never minding whether Critias
or Socrates is the person refuted; attend
only to the argument, and see what will come
of the refutation.
I think that you are right, he replied; and
I will do as you say.
Tell me, then, I said, what you mean to affirm
about wisdom.
I mean to say that wisdom is the only science
which is the science of itself as well as
of the other sciences.
But the science of science, I said, will
also be the science of the absence of science.
Very true, he said.
Then the wise or temperate man, and he only,
will know himself, and be able to examine
what he knows or does not know, and to see
what others know and think that they know
and do really know; and what they do not
know, and fancy that they know, when they
do not. No other person will be able to do
this. And this is wisdom and temperance and
self-knowledge-for a man to know what he
knows, and what he does not know. That is
your meaning?
Yes, he said.
Now then, I said, making an offering of the
third or last argument to Zeus the Saviour,
let us begin again, and ask, in the first
place, whether it is or is not possible for
a person to know that he knows and does not
know what he knows and does not know; and
in the second place, whether, if perfectly
possible, such knowledge is of any use.
That is what we have to consider, he said.
And here, Critias, I said, I hope that you
will find a way out of a difficulty into
which I have got myself. Shall I tell you
the nature of the difficulty?
By all means, he replied.
Does not what you have been saying, if true,
amount to this: that there must be a single
science which is wholly a science of itself
and of other sciences, and that the same
is also the science of the absence of science?
Yes.
But consider how monstrous this proposition
is, my friend: in any parallel case, the
impossibility will be transparent to you.
How is that? and in what cases do you mean?
In such cases as this: Suppose that there
is a kind of vision which is not like ordinary
vision, but a vision of itself and of other
sorts of vision, and of the defect of them,
which in seeing sees no colour, but only
itself and other sorts of vision: Do you
think that there is such a kind of vision?
Certainly not.
Or is there a kind of hearing which hears
no sound at all, but only itself and other
sorts of hearing, or the defects of them?
There is not.
Or take all the senses: can you imagine that
there is any sense of itself and of other
senses, but which is incapable of perceiving
the objects of the senses?
I think not.
Could there be any desire which is not the
desire of any pleasure, but of itself, and
of all other desires?
Certainly not.
Or can you imagine a wish which wishes for
no good, but only for itself and all other
wishes?
I should answer, No.
Or would you say that there is a love which
is not the love of beauty, but of itself
and of other loves?
I should not.
Or did you ever know of a fear which fears
itself or other fears, but has no object
of fear?
I never did, he said.
Or of an opinion which is an opinion of itself
and of other opinions, and which has no opinion
on the subjects of opinion in general?
Certainly not.
But surely we are assuming a science of this
kind, which, having no subject-matter, is
a science of itself and of the other sciences?
Yes, that is what is affirmed.
But how strange is this, if it be indeed
true: must not however as yet absolutely
deny the possibility of such a science; let
us rather consider the matter.
You are quite right.
Well then, this science of which we are speaking
is a science of something, and is of a nature
to be a science of something?
Yes.
Just as that which is greater is of a nature
to be greater than something else?
Yes.
Which is less, if the other is conceived
to be greater?
To be sure.
And if we could find something which is at
once greater than itself, and greater than
other great things, but not greater than
those things in comparison of which the others
are greater, then that thing would have the
property of being greater and also less than
itself?
That, Socrates, he said, is the inevitable
inference.
Or if there be a double which is double of
itself and of other doubles, these will be
halves; for the double is relative to the
half?
That is true.
And that which is greater than itself will
also be less, and that which is heavier will
also be lighter, and that which is older
will also be younger: and the same of other
things; that which has a nature relative
to self will retain also the nature of its
object: I mean to say, for example, that
hearing is, as we say, of sound or voice.
Is that true?
Yes.
Then if hearing hears itself, it must hear
a voice; for there is no other way of hearing.
Certainly.
And sight also, my excellent friend, if it
sees itself must see a colour, for sight
cannot see that which has no colour.
No.
Do you remark, Critias, that in several of
the examples which have been recited the
notion of a relation to self is altogether
inadmissible, and in other cases hardly credible-inadmissible,
for example, in the case of magnitudes, numbers,
and the like?
Very true.
But in the case of hearing and sight, or
in the power of self-motion, and the power
of heat to burn, this relation to self will
be regarded as incredible by some, but perhaps
not by others. And some great man, my friend,
is wanted, who will satisfactorily determine
for us, whether there is nothing which has
an inherent property of relation to self,
or some things only and not others; and whether
in this class of self-related things, if
there be such a class, that science which
is called wisdom or temperance is included.
I altogether distrust my own power of determining
these matters: I am not certain whether there
is such a science of science at all; and
even if there be, I should not acknowledge
this to be wisdom or temperance, until I
can also see whether such a science would
or would not do us any good; for I have an
impression that temperance is a benefit and
a good. And therefore, O son of Callaeschrus,
as you maintain that temperance or wisdom
is a science of science, and also of the
absence of science, I will request you to
show in the first place, as I was saying
before, the possibility, and in the second
place, the advantage, of such a science;
and then perhaps you may satisfy me that
you are right in your view of temperance.
Critias heard me say this, and saw that I
was in a difficulty; and as one person when
another yawns in his presence catches the
infection of yawning from him, so did he
seem to be driven into a difficulty by my
difficulty. But as he had a reputation to
maintain, he was ashamed to admit before
the company that he could not answer my challenge
or determine the question at issue; and he
made an unintelligible attempt to hide his
perplexity. In order that the argument might
proceed, I said to him, Well then Critias,
if you like, let us assume that there is
this science of science; whether the assumption
is right or wrong may hereafter be investigated.
Admitting the existence of it, will you tell
me how such a science enables us to distinguish
what we know or do not know, which, as we
were saying, is self-knowledge or wisdom:
so we were saying?
Yes, Socrates, he said; and that I think
is certainly true: for he who has this science
or knowledge which knows itself will become
like the knowledge which he has, in the same
way that he who has swiftness will be swift,
and he who has beauty will be beautiful,
and he who has knowledge will know. In the
same way he who has that knowledge which
is self-knowing, will know himself.
I do not doubt, I said, that a man will know
himself, when he possesses that which has
self-knowledge: but what necessity is there
that, having this, he should know what he
knows and what he does not know?
Because, Socrates, they are the same.
Very likely, I said; but I remain as stupid
as ever; for still I fail to comprehend how
this knowing what you know and do not know
is the same as the knowledge of self.
What do you mean? he said.
This is what I mean, I replied: I will admit
that there is a science of science;-can this
do more than determine that of two things
one is and the other is not science or knowledge?
No, just that.
But is knowledge or want of knowledge of
health the same as knowledge or want of knowledge
of justice?
Certainly not.
The one is medicine, and the other is politics;
whereas that of which we are speaking is
knowledge pure and simple.
Very true.
And if a man knows only, and has only knowledge
of knowledge, and has no further knowledge
of health and justice, the probability is
that he will only know that he knows something,
and has a certain knowledge, whether concerning
himself or other men.
True.
Then how will this knowledge or science teach
him to know what he knows? Say that he knows
health;-not wisdom or temperance, but the
art of medicine has taught it to him; and
he has learned harmony from the art of music,
and building from the art of building, neither,
from wisdom or temperance: and the same of
other things.
That is evident.
How will wisdom, regarded only as a knowledge
of knowledge or science of science, ever
teach him that he knows health, or that he
knows building?
It is impossible.
Then he who is ignorant of these things will
only know that he knows, but not what he
knows?
True.
Then wisdom or being wise appears to be not
the knowledge of the things which we do or
do not know, but only the knowledge that
we know or do not know?
That is the inference.
Then he who has this knowledge will not be
able to examine whether a pretender knows
or does not know that which he says that
he knows: he will only know that he has a
knowledge of some kind; but wisdom will not
show him of what the knowledge is?
Plainly not.
Neither will he be able to distinguish the
pretender in medicine from the true physician,
nor between any other true and false professor
of knowledge. Let us consider the matter
in this way: If the wise man or any other
man wants to distinguish the true physician
from the false, how will he proceed? He will
not talk to him about medicine; and that,
as we were saying, is the only thing which
the physician understands.
True.
And, on the other hand, the physician knows
nothing of science, for this has been assumed
to be the province of wisdom.
True.
And further, since medicine is science, we
must infer that he does not know anything
of medicine.
Exactly.
Then the wise man may indeed know that the
physician has some kind of science or knowledge;
but when he wants to discover the nature
of this he will ask, What is the subject-matter?
For the several sciences are distinguished
not by the mere fact that they are sciences,
but by the nature of their subjects. Is not
that true?
Quite true.
And medicine is distinguished from other
sciences as having the subject-matter of
health and disease?
Yes.
And he who would enquire into the nature
of medicine must pursue the enquiry into
health and disease, and not into what is
extraneous?
True.
And he who judges rightly will judge of the
physician as a physician in what relates
to these?
He will.
He will consider whether what he says is
true, and whether what he does is right,
in relation to health and disease?
He will.
But can any one attain the knowledge of either
unless he have a of medicine?
He cannot.
No one at all, it would seem, except the
physician can have this knowledge; and therefore
not the wise man; he would have to be a physician
as well as a wise man.
Very true.
Then, assuredly, wisdom or temperance, if
only a science of science, and of the absence
of science or knowledge, will not be able
to distinguish the physician who knows from
one who does not know but pretends or thinks
that he knows, or any other professor of
anything at all; like any other artist, he
will only know his fellow in art or wisdom,
and no one else.
That is evident, he said.
But then what profit, Critias, I said, is
there any longer in wisdom or temperance
which yet remains, if this is wisdom? If,
indeed, as we were supposing at first, the
wise man had been able to distinguish what
he knew and did not know, and that he knew
the one and did not know the other, and to
recognize a similar faculty of discernment
in others, there would certainly have been
a great advantage in being wise; for then
we should never have made a mistake, but
have passed through life the unerring guides
of ourselves and of those who are under us;
and we should not have attempted to do what
we did not know, but we should have found
out those who knew, and have handed the business
over to them and trusted in them; nor should
we have allowed those who were under us to
do anything which they were not likely to
do well and they would be likely to do well
just that of which they had knowledge; and
the house or state which was ordered or administered
under the guidance of wisdom, and everything
else of which wisdom was the lord, would
have been well ordered; for truth guiding,
and error having been eliminated, in all
their doings, men would have done well, and
would have been happy. Was not this, Critias,
what we spoke of as the great advantage of
wisdom to know what is known and what is
unknown to us?
Very true, he said.
And now you perceive, I said, that no such
science is to be found anywhere.
I perceive, he said.
May we assume then, I said, that wisdom,
viewed in this new light merely as a knowledge
of knowledge and ignorance, has this advantage:-that
he who possesses such knowledge will more
easily learn anything which he learns; and
that everything will be clearer to him, because,
in addition to the knowledge of individuals,
he sees the science, and this also will better
enable him to test the knowledge which others
have of what he knows himself; whereas the
enquirer who is without this knowledge may
be supposed to have a feebler and weaker
insight? Are not these, my friend, the real
advantages which are to be gained from wisdom?
And are not we looking and seeking after
something more than is to be found in her?
That is very likely, he said.
That is very likely, I said; and very likely,
too, we have been enquiring to no purpose;
as I am led to infer, because I observe that
if this is wisdom, some strange consequences
would follow. Let us, if you please, assume
the possibility of this science of sciences,
and further admit and allow, as was originally
suggested, that wisdom is the knowledge of
what we know and do not know. Assuming all
this, still, upon further consideration,
I am doubtful, Critias, whether wisdom, such
as this, would do us much good. For we were
wrong, I think, in supposing, as we were
saying just now, that such wisdom ordering
the government of house or state would be
a great benefit.
How so? he said.
Why, I said, we were far too ready to admit
the great benefits which mankind would obtain
from their severally doing the things which
they knew, and committing the things of which
they are ignorant to those who were better
acquainted with them.
Were we not right in making that admission?
I think not.
How very strange, Socrates!
By the dog of Egypt, I said, there I agree
with you; and I was thinking as much just
now when I said that strange consequences
would follow, and that I was afraid we were
on the wrong track; for however ready we
may be to admit that this is wisdom, I certainly
cannot make out what good this sort of thing
does to us.
What do you mean? he said; I wish that you
could make me understand what you mean.
I dare say that what I am saying is nonsense,
I replied; and yet if a man has any feeling
of what is due to himself, he cannot let
the thought which comes into his mind pass
away unheeded and unexamined.
I like that, he said.
Hear, then, I said, my own dream; whether
coming through the horn or the ivory gate,
I cannot tell. The dream is this: Let us
suppose that wisdom is such as we are now
defining, and that she has absolute sway
over us; then each action will be done according
to the arts or sciences, and no one professing
to be a pilot when he is not, or any physician
or general, or any one else pretending to
know matters of which he is ignorant, will
deceive or elude us; our health will be improved;
our safety at sea, and also in battle, will
be assured; our coats and shoes, and all
other instruments and implements will be
skilfully made, because the workmen will
be good and true. Aye, and if you please,
you may suppose that prophecy, which is the
knowledge of the future, will be under the
control of wisdom, and that she will deter
deceivers and set up the true prophets in
their place as the revealers of the future.
Now I quite agree that mankind, thus provided,
would live and act according to knowledge,
for wisdom would watch and prevent ignorance
from intruding on us. But whether by acting
according to knowledge we shall act well
and be happy, my dear Critias,-this is a
point which we have not yet been able to
determine.
Yet I think, he replied, that if you discard
knowledge, you will hardly find the crown
of happiness in anything else.
But of what is this knowledge? I said. Just
answer me that small question. Do you mean
a knowledge of shoemaking?
God forbid.
Or of working in brass?
Certainly not.
Or in wool, or wood, or anything of that
sort?
No, I do not.
Then, I said, we are giving up the doctrine
that he who lives according to knowledge
is happy, for these live according to knowledge,
and yet they are not allowed by you to be
happy; but I think that you mean to confine
happiness to particular individuals who live
according to knowledge, such for example
as the prophet, who, as I was saying, knows
the future. Is it of him you are speaking
or of some one else?
Yes, I mean him, but there are others as
well.
Yes, I said, some one who knows the past
and present as well as the future, and is
ignorant of nothing. Let us suppose that
there is such a person, and if there is,
you will allow that he is the most knowing
of all living men.
Certainly he is.
Yet I should like to know one thing more:
which of the different kinds of knowledge
makes him happy? or do all equally make him
happy?
Not all equally, he replied.
But which most tends to make him happy? the
knowledge of what past, present, or future
thing? May I infer this to be the knowledge
of the game of draughts?
Nonsense about the game of draughts.
Or of computation?
No.
Or of health?
That is nearer the truth, he said.
And that knowledge which is nearest of all,
I said, is the knowledge of what?
The knowledge with which he discerns good
and evil.
Monster! I said; you have been carrying me
round in a circle, and all this time hiding
from me the fact that the life according
to knowledge is not that which makes men
act rightly and be happy, not even if knowledge
include all the sciences, but one science
only, that of good and evil. For, let me
ask you, Critias, whether, if you take away
this, medicine will not equally give health,
and shoemaking equally produce shoes, and
the art of the weaver clothes?-whether the
art of the pilot will not equally save our
lives at sea, and the art of the general
in war?
Quite so.
And yet, my dear Critias, none of these things
will be well or beneficially done, if the
science of the good be wanting.
True.
But that science is not wisdom or temperance,
but a science of human advantage; not a science
of other sciences, or of ignorance, but of
good and evil: and if this be of use, then
wisdom or temperance will not be of use.
And why, he replied, will not wisdom be of
use? For, however much we assume that wisdom
is a science of sciences, and has a sway
over other sciences, surely she will have
this particular science of the good under
her control, and in this way will benefit
us.
And will wisdom give health? I said; is not
this rather the effect of medicine? Or does
wisdom do the work any of the other arts,
do they not each of them do their own work?
Have we not long ago asseverated that wisdom
is only the knowledge of knowledge and of
ignorance, and of nothing else?
That is obvious.
Then wisdom will not be the producer of health.
Certainly not.
The art of health is different.
Yes, different.
Nor does wisdom give advantage, my good friend;
for that again we have just now been attributing
to another art.
Very true.
How then can wisdom be advantageous, when
giving no advantage?
That, Socrates, is certainly inconceivable.
You see then, Critias, that I was not far
wrong in fearing that I could have no sound
notion about wisdom; I was quite right in
depreciating myself; for that which is admitted
to be the best of all things would never
have seemed to us useless, if I had been
good for anything at an enquiry. But now
I have been utterly defeated, and have failed
to discover what that is to which the imposer
of names gave this name of temperance or
wisdom. And yet many more admissions were
made by us than could be fairly granted;
for we admitted that there was a science
of science, although the argument said No,
and protested against us; and we admitted
further, that this science knew the works
of the other sciences (although this too
was denied by the argument), because we wanted
to show that the wise man had knowledge of
what he knew and did not know; also we nobly
disregarded, and never even considered, the
impossibility of a man knowing in a sort
of way that which he does not know at all;
for our assumption was, that he knows that
which he does not know; than which nothing,
as I think, can be more irrational. And yet,
after finding us so easy and good-natured,
the enquiry is still unable to discover the
truth; but mocks us to a degree, and has
gone out of its way to prove the inutility
of that which we admitted only by a sort
of supposition and fiction to be the true
definition of temperance or wisdom: which
result, as far as I am concerned, is not
so much to be lamented, I said. But for your
sake, Charmides, I am very sorry-that you,
having such beauty and such wisdom and temperance
of soul, should have no profit or good in
life from your wisdom and temperance. And
still more am I grieved about the charm which
I learned with so much pain, and to so little
profit, from the Thracian, for the sake of
a thing which is nothing worth. I think indeed
that there is a mistake, and that I must
be a bad enquirer, for wisdom or temperance
I believe to be really a great good; and
happy are you, Charmides, if you certainly
possess it. Wherefore examine yourself, and
see whether you have this gift and can do
without the charm; for if you can, I would
rather advise you to regard me simply as
a fool who is never able to reason out anything;
and to rest assured that the more wise and
temperate you are, the happier you will be.
Charmides said: I am sure that I do not know,
Socrates, whether I have or have not this
gift of wisdom and temperance; for how can
I know whether I have a thing, of which even
you and Critias are, as you say, unable to
discover the nature?-(not that I believe
you.) And further, I am sure, Socrates, that
I do need the charm, and as far as I am concerned,
I shall be willing to be charmed by you daily,
until you say that I have had enough.
Very good, Charmides, said Critias; if you
do this I shall have a proof of your temperance,
that is, if you allow yourself to be charmed
by Socrates, and never desert him at all.
You may depend on my following and not deserting
him, said Charmides: if you who are my guardian
command me, I should be very wrong not to
obey you.
And I do command you, he said.
Then I will do as you say, and begin this
very day.
You sirs, I said, what are you conspiring
about?
We are not conspiring, said Charmides, we
have conspired already.
And are you about to use violence, without
even going through the forms of justice?
Yes, I shall use violence, he replied, since
he orders me; and therefore you had better
consider well.
But the time for consideration has passed,
I said, when violence is employed; and you,
when you are determined on anything, and
in the mood of violence, are irresistible.
Do not you resist me then, he said.
I will not resist you, I replied.
-THE END- .
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