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    Book V

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    ATHENIAN: Listen, all ye who have just now heard the laws about Gods, and
    about our dear forefathers:--Of all the things which a man has, next to
    the Gods, his soul is the most divine and most truly his own. Now in every
    man there are two parts: the better and superior, which rules, and the
    worse and inferior, which serves; and the ruling part of him is always to
    be preferred to the subject. Wherefore I am right in bidding every one
    next to the Gods, who are our masters, and those who in order follow them
    (i.e. the demons), to honour his own soul, which every one seems to
    honour, but no one honours as he ought; for honour is a divine good, and
    no evil thing is honourable; and he who thinks that he can honour the soul
    by word or gift, or any sort of compliance, without making her in any way
    better, seems to honour her, but honours her not at all. For example,
    every man, from his very boyhood, fancies that he is able to know
    everything, and thinks that he honours his soul by praising her, and he is
    very ready to let her do whatever she may like. But I mean to say that in
    acting thus he injures his soul, and is far from honouring her; whereas,
    in our opinion, he ought to honour her as second only to the Gods. Again,
    when a man thinks that others are to be blamed, and not himself, for the
    errors which he has committed from time to time, and the many and great
    evils which befell him in consequence, and is always fancying himself to
    be exempt and innocent, he is under the idea that he is honouring his
    soul; whereas the very reverse is the fact, for he is really injuring her.
    And when, disregarding the word and approval of the legislator, he
    indulges in pleasure, then again he is far from honouring her; he only
    dishonours her, and fills her full of evil and remorse; or when he does
    not endure to the end the labours and fears and sorrows and pains which
    the legislator approves, but gives way before them, then, by yielding, he
    does not honour the soul, but by all such conduct he makes her to be
    dishonourable; nor when he thinks that life at any price is a good, does
    he honour her, but yet once more he dishonours her; for the soul having a
    notion that the world below is all evil, he yields to her, and does not
    resist and teach or convince her that, for aught she knows, the world of

    the Gods below, instead of being evil, may be the greatest of all goods.
    Again, when any one prefers beauty to virtue, what is this but the real
    and utter dishonour of the soul? For such a preference implies that the
    body is more honourable than the soul; and this is false, for there is
    nothing of earthly birth which is more honourable than the heavenly, and
    he who thinks otherwise of the soul has no idea how greatly he undervalues
    this wonderful
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