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    On the Symposium

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    ON THE SYMPOSIUM, OR PREFACE TO THE BANQUET OF PLATO

    A FRAGMENT

    The dialogue entitled The Banquet was selected by the translator
    as the most beautiful and perfect among all the works of Plato.
    [Footnote: The Republic, though replete with considerable errors
    of speculation, is, indeed, the greatest repository of important
    truths of all the works of Plato. This, perhaps, is because it is
    the longest. He first, and perhaps last, maintained that a state
    ought to be governed, not by the wealthiest, or the most ambitious,
    or the most cunning, but by the wisest; the method of selecting
    such rulers, and the laws by which such a selection is made, must
    correspond with and arise out of the moral freedom and refinement
    of the people.] He despairs of having communicated to the English
    language any portion of the surpassing graces of the composition,
    or having done more than present an imperfect shadow of the language
    and the sentiment of this astonishing production.

    Plato is eminently the greatest among the Greek philosophers, and
    from, or, rather, perhaps through him, his master Socrates, have
    proceeded those emanations of moral and metaphysical knowledge,
    on which a long series and an incalculable variety of popular
    superstitions have sheltered their absurdities from the slow contempt
    of mankind. Plato exhibits the rare union of close and subtle logic
    with the Pythian enthusiasm of poetry, melted by the splendour
    and harmony of his periods into one irresistible stream of musical
    impressions, which hurry the persuasions onward, as in a breathless
    career. His language is that of an immortal spirit, rather than
    a man. Lord Bacon is, perhaps, the only writer, who, in these
    particulars, can be compared with him: his imitator, Cicero, sinks
    in the comparison into an ape mocking the gestures of a man. His
    views into the nature of mind and existence are often obscure, only
    because they are profound; and though his theories respecting the
    government of the world, and the elementary laws of moral action,
    are not always correct, yet there is scarcely any of his treatises
    which do not, however stained by puerile sophisms, contain the
    most remarkable intuitions into all that can be the subject of the
    human mind. His excellence consists especially in intuition, and

    it is this faculty which raises him far above Aristotle, whose
    genius, though vivid and various, is obscure in comparison with
    that of Plato.

    The dialogue entitled the Banquet, is called [word in Greek], or
    a Discussion upon Love, and is supposed to have taken place at the
    house of Agathon, at one of a series of festivals given by that
    poet, on the occasion of his gaining the prize of tragedy at the
    Dionysiaca. The account of the
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