<p>When Agathon had done speaking, Aristodemus said that there was a general
cheer; the young man was thought to have spoken in a manner worthy of
himself, and of the god. And Socrates, looking at Eryximachus, said: Tell
me, son of Acumenus, was there not reason in my fears? and was I not a
true prophet when I said that Agathon would make a wonderful oration, and
that I should be in a strait?</p>
<p>The part of the prophecy which concerns Agathon, replied Eryximachus,
appears to me to be true; but not the other part—that you will be in
a strait.</p>
<p>Why, my dear friend, said Socrates, must not I or any one be in a strait
who has to speak after he has heard such a rich and varied discourse? I am
especially struck with the beauty of the concluding words—who could
listen to them without amazement? When I reflected on the immeasurable
inferiority of my own powers, I was ready to run away for shame, if there
had been a possibility of escape. For I was reminded of Gorgias, and at
the end of his speech I fancied that Agathon was shaking at me the
Gorginian or Gorgonian head of the great master of rhetoric, which was
simply to turn me and my speech into stone, as Homer says (Odyssey), and
strike me dumb. And then I perceived how foolish I had been in consenting
to take my turn with you in praising love, and saying that I too was a
master of the art, when I really had no conception how anything ought to
be praised. For in my simplicity I imagined that the topics of praise
should be true, and that this being presupposed, out of the true the
speaker was to choose the best and set them forth in the best manner. And
I felt quite proud, thinking that I knew the nature of true praise, and
should speak well. Whereas I now see that the intention was to attribute
to Love every species of greatness and glory, whether really belonging to
him or not, without regard to truth or falsehood—that was no matter;
for the original proposal seems to have been not that each of you should
really praise Love, but only that you should appear to praise him. And so
you attribute to Love every imaginable form of praise which can be
gathered anywhere; and you say that 'he is all this,' and 'the cause of
all that,' making him appear the fairest and best of all to those who know
him not, for you cannot impose upon those who know him. And a noble and
solemn hymn of praise have you rehearsed. But as I misunderstood the
nature of the praise when I said that I would take my turn, I must beg to
be absolved from the promise which I made in ignorance, and which (as
Euripides would say (Eurip. Hyppolytus)) was a promise of the lips and not
of the mind. Farewell then to such a strain: for I do not praise in that
way; no, indeed, I cannot. But if you like to hear the truth about love, I
am ready to speak in my own manner, though I will not make myself
ridiculous by entering into any rivalry with you. Say then, Phaedrus,
whether you would like to have the truth about love, spoken in any words
and in any order which may happen to come into my mind at the time. Will
that be agreeable to you?</p>
<p>Aristodemus said that Phaedrus and the company bid him speak in any manner
which he thought best. Then, he added, let me have your permission first
to ask Agathon a few more questions, in order that I may take his
admissions as the premisses of my discourse.</p>
<p>I grant the permission, said Phaedrus: put your questions. Socrates then
proceeded as follows:—</p>
<p>In the magnificent oration which you have just uttered, I think that you
were right, my dear Agathon, in proposing to speak of the nature of Love
first and afterwards of his works—that is a way of beginning which I
very much approve. And as you have spoken so eloquently of his nature, may
I ask you further, Whether love is the love of something or of nothing?
And here I must explain myself: I do not want you to say that love is the
love of a father or the love of a mother—that would be ridiculous;
but to answer as you would, if I asked is a father a father of something?
to which you would find no difficulty in replying, of a son or daughter:
and the answer would be right.</p>
<p>Very true, said Agathon.</p>
<p>And you would say the same of a mother?</p>
<p>He assented.</p>
<p>Yet let me ask you one more question in order to illustrate my meaning: Is
not a brother to be regarded essentially as a brother of something?</p>
<p>Certainly, he replied.</p>
<p>That is, of a brother or sister?</p>
<p>Yes, he said.</p>
<p>And now, said Socrates, I will ask about Love:—Is Love of something
or of nothing?</p>
<p>Of something, surely, he replied.</p>
<p>Keep in mind what this is, and tell me what I want to know—whether
Love desires that of which love is.</p>
<p>Yes, surely.</p>
<p>And does he possess, or does he not possess, that which he loves and
desires?</p>
<p>Probably not, I should say.</p>
<p>Nay, replied Socrates, I would have you consider whether 'necessarily' is
not rather the word. The inference that he who desires something is in
want of something, and that he who desires nothing is in want of nothing,
is in my judgment, Agathon, absolutely and necessarily true. What do you
think?</p>
<p>I agree with you, said Agathon.</p>
<p>Very good. Would he who is great, desire to be great, or he who is strong,
desire to be strong?</p>
<p>That would be inconsistent with our previous admissions.</p>
<p>True. For he who is anything cannot want to be that which he is?</p>
<p>Very true.</p>
<p>And yet, added Socrates, if a man being strong desired to be strong, or
being swift desired to be swift, or being healthy desired to be healthy,
in that case he might be thought to desire something which he already has
or is. I give the example in order that we may avoid misconception. For
the possessors of these qualities, Agathon, must be supposed to have their
respective advantages at the time, whether they choose or not; and who can
desire that which he has? Therefore, when a person says, I am well and
wish to be well, or I am rich and wish to be rich, and I desire simply to
have what I have—to him we shall reply: 'You, my friend, having
wealth and health and strength, want to have the continuance of them; for
at this moment, whether you choose or no, you have them. And when you say,
I desire that which I have and nothing else, is not your meaning that you
want to have what you now have in the future?' He must agree with us—must
he not?</p>
<p>He must, replied Agathon.</p>
<p>Then, said Socrates, he desires that what he has at present may be
preserved to him in the future, which is equivalent to saying that he
desires something which is non-existent to him, and which as yet he has
not got:</p>
<p>Very true, he said.</p>
<p>Then he and every one who desires, desires that which he has not already,
and which is future and not present, and which he has not, and is not, and
of which he is in want;—these are the sort of things which love and
desire seek?</p>
<p>Very true, he said.</p>
<p>Then now, said Socrates, let us recapitulate the argument. First, is not
love of something, and of something too which is wanting to a man?</p>
<p>Yes, he replied.</p>
<p>Remember further what you said in your speech, or if you do not remember I
will remind you: you said that the love of the beautiful set in order the
empire of the gods, for that of deformed things there is no love—did
you not say something of that kind?</p>
<p>Yes, said Agathon.</p>
<p>Yes, my friend, and the remark was a just one. And if this is true, Love
is the love of beauty and not of deformity?</p>
<p>He assented.</p>
<p>And the admission has been already made that Love is of something which a
man wants and has not?</p>
<p>True, he said.</p>
<p>Then Love wants and has not beauty?</p>
<p>Certainly, he replied.</p>
<p>And would you call that beautiful which wants and does not possess beauty?</p>
<p>Certainly not.</p>
<p>Then would you still say that love is beautiful?</p>
<p>Agathon replied: I fear that I did not understand what I was saying.</p>
<p>You made a very good speech, Agathon, replied Socrates; but there is yet
one small question which I would fain ask:—Is not the good also the
beautiful?</p>
<p>Yes.</p>
<p>Then in wanting the beautiful, love wants also the good?</p>
<p>I cannot refute you, Socrates, said Agathon:—Let us assume that what
you say is true.</p>
<p>Say rather, beloved Agathon, that you cannot refute the truth; for
Socrates is easily refuted.</p>
<p>And now, taking my leave of you, I would rehearse a tale of love which I
heard from Diotima of Mantineia (compare 1 Alcibiades), a woman wise in
this and in many other kinds of knowledge, who in the days of old, when
the Athenians offered sacrifice before the coming of the plague, delayed
the disease ten years. She was my instructress in the art of love, and I
shall repeat to you what she said to me, beginning with the admissions
made by Agathon, which are nearly if not quite the same which I made to
the wise woman when she questioned me: I think that this will be the
easiest way, and I shall take both parts myself as well as I can (compare
Gorgias). As you, Agathon, suggested (supra), I must speak first of the
being and nature of Love, and then of his works. First I said to her in
nearly the same words which he used to me, that Love was a mighty god, and
likewise fair; and she proved to me as I proved to him that, by my own
showing, Love was neither fair nor good. 'What do you mean, Diotima,' I
said, 'is love then evil and foul?' 'Hush,' she cried; 'must that be foul
which is not fair?' 'Certainly,' I said. 'And is that which is not wise,
ignorant? do you not see that there is a mean between wisdom and
ignorance?' 'And what may that be?' I said. 'Right opinion,' she replied;
'which, as you know, being incapable of giving a reason, is not knowledge
(for how can knowledge be devoid of reason? nor again, ignorance, for
neither can ignorance attain the truth), but is clearly something which is
a mean between ignorance and wisdom.' 'Quite true,' I replied. 'Do not
then insist,' she said, 'that what is not fair is of necessity foul, or
what is not good evil; or infer that because love is not fair and good he
is therefore foul and evil; for he is in a mean between them.' 'Well,' I
said, 'Love is surely admitted by all to be a great god.' 'By those who
know or by those who do not know?' 'By all.' 'And how, Socrates,' she said
with a smile, 'can Love be acknowledged to be a great god by those who say
that he is not a god at all?' 'And who are they?' I said. 'You and I are
two of them,' she replied. 'How can that be?' I said. 'It is quite
intelligible,' she replied; 'for you yourself would acknowledge that the
gods are happy and fair—of course you would—would you dare to
say that any god was not?' 'Certainly not,' I replied. 'And you mean by
the happy, those who are the possessors of things good or fair?' 'Yes.'
'And you admitted that Love, because he was in want, desires those good
and fair things of which he is in want?' 'Yes, I did.' 'But how can he be
a god who has no portion in what is either good or fair?' 'Impossible.'
'Then you see that you also deny the divinity of Love.'</p>
<p>'What then is Love?' I asked; 'Is he mortal?' 'No.' 'What then?' 'As in
the former instance, he is neither mortal nor immortal, but in a mean
between the two.' 'What is he, Diotima?' 'He is a great spirit (daimon),
and like all spirits he is intermediate between the divine and the
mortal.' 'And what,' I said, 'is his power?' 'He interprets,' she replied,
'between gods and men, conveying and taking across to the gods the prayers
and sacrifices of men, and to men the commands and replies of the gods; he
is the mediator who spans the chasm which divides them, and therefore in
him all is bound together, and through him the arts of the prophet and the
priest, their sacrifices and mysteries and charms, and all prophecy and
incantation, find their way. For God mingles not with man; but through
Love all the intercourse and converse of God with man, whether awake or
asleep, is carried on. The wisdom which understands this is spiritual; all
other wisdom, such as that of arts and handicrafts, is mean and vulgar.
Now these spirits or intermediate powers are many and diverse, and one of
them is Love.' 'And who,' I said, 'was his father, and who his mother?'
'The tale,' she said, 'will take time; nevertheless I will tell you. On
the birthday of Aphrodite there was a feast of the gods, at which the god
Poros or Plenty, who is the son of Metis or Discretion, was one of the
guests. When the feast was over, Penia or Poverty, as the manner is on
such occasions, came about the doors to beg. Now Plenty who was the worse
for nectar (there was no wine in those days), went into the garden of Zeus
and fell into a heavy sleep, and Poverty considering her own straitened
circumstances, plotted to have a child by him, and accordingly she lay
down at his side and conceived Love, who partly because he is naturally a
lover of the beautiful, and because Aphrodite is herself beautiful, and
also because he was born on her birthday, is her follower and attendant.
And as his parentage is, so also are his fortunes. In the first place he
is always poor, and anything but tender and fair, as the many imagine him;
and he is rough and squalid, and has no shoes, nor a house to dwell in; on
the bare earth exposed he lies under the open heaven, in the streets, or
at the doors of houses, taking his rest; and like his mother he is always
in distress. Like his father too, whom he also partly resembles, he is
always plotting against the fair and good; he is bold, enterprising,
strong, a mighty hunter, always weaving some intrigue or other, keen in
the pursuit of wisdom, fertile in resources; a philosopher at all times,
terrible as an enchanter, sorcerer, sophist. He is by nature neither
mortal nor immortal, but alive and flourishing at one moment when he is in
plenty, and dead at another moment, and again alive by reason of his
father's nature. But that which is always flowing in is always flowing
out, and so he is never in want and never in wealth; and, further, he is
in a mean between ignorance and knowledge. The truth of the matter is
this: No god is a philosopher or seeker after wisdom, for he is wise
already; nor does any man who is wise seek after wisdom. Neither do the
ignorant seek after wisdom. For herein is the evil of ignorance, that he
who is neither good nor wise is nevertheless satisfied with himself: he
has no desire for that of which he feels no want.' 'But who then,
Diotima,' I said, 'are the lovers of wisdom, if they are neither the wise
nor the foolish?' 'A child may answer that question,' she replied; 'they
are those who are in a mean between the two; Love is one of them. For
wisdom is a most beautiful thing, and Love is of the beautiful; and
therefore Love is also a philosopher or lover of wisdom, and being a lover
of wisdom is in a mean between the wise and the ignorant. And of this too
his birth is the cause; for his father is wealthy and wise, and his mother
poor and foolish. Such, my dear Socrates, is the nature of the spirit
Love. The error in your conception of him was very natural, and as I
imagine from what you say, has arisen out of a confusion of love and the
beloved, which made you think that love was all beautiful. For the beloved
is the truly beautiful, and delicate, and perfect, and blessed; but the
principle of love is of another nature, and is such as I have described.'</p>
<p>I said, 'O thou stranger woman, thou sayest well; but, assuming Love to be
such as you say, what is the use of him to men?' 'That, Socrates,' she
replied, 'I will attempt to unfold: of his nature and birth I have already
spoken; and you acknowledge that love is of the beautiful. But some one
will say: Of the beautiful in what, Socrates and Diotima?—or rather
let me put the question more clearly, and ask: When a man loves the
beautiful, what does he desire?' I answered her 'That the beautiful may be
his.' 'Still,' she said, 'the answer suggests a further question: What is
given by the possession of beauty?' 'To what you have asked,' I replied,
'I have no answer ready.' 'Then,' she said, 'let me put the word "good" in
the place of the beautiful, and repeat the question once more: If he who
loves loves the good, what is it then that he loves?' 'The possession of
the good,' I said. 'And what does he gain who possesses the good?'
'Happiness,' I replied; 'there is less difficulty in answering that
question.' 'Yes,' she said, 'the happy are made happy by the acquisition
of good things. Nor is there any need to ask why a man desires happiness;
the answer is already final.' 'You are right.' I said. 'And is this wish
and this desire common to all? and do all men always desire their own
good, or only some men?—what say you?' 'All men,' I replied; 'the
desire is common to all.' 'Why, then,' she rejoined, 'are not all men,
Socrates, said to love, but only some of them? whereas you say that all
men are always loving the same things.' 'I myself wonder,' I said, 'why
this is.' 'There is nothing to wonder at,' she replied; 'the reason is
that one part of love is separated off and receives the name of the whole,
but the other parts have other names.' 'Give an illustration,' I said. She
answered me as follows: 'There is poetry, which, as you know, is complex
and manifold. All creation or passage of non-being into being is poetry or
making, and the processes of all art are creative; and the masters of arts
are all poets or makers.' 'Very true.' 'Still,' she said, 'you know that
they are not called poets, but have other names; only that portion of the
art which is separated off from the rest, and is concerned with music and
metre, is termed poetry, and they who possess poetry in this sense of the
word are called poets.' 'Very true,' I said. 'And the same holds of love.
For you may say generally that all desire of good and happiness is only
the great and subtle power of love; but they who are drawn towards him by
any other path, whether the path of money-making or gymnastics or
philosophy, are not called lovers—the name of the whole is
appropriated to those whose affection takes one form only—they alone
are said to love, or to be lovers.' 'I dare say,' I replied, 'that you are
right.' 'Yes,' she added, 'and you hear people say that lovers are seeking
for their other half; but I say that they are seeking neither for the half
of themselves, nor for the whole, unless the half or the whole be also a
good. And they will cut off their own hands and feet and cast them away,
if they are evil; for they love not what is their own, unless perchance
there be some one who calls what belongs to him the good, and what belongs
to another the evil. For there is nothing which men love but the good. Is
there anything?' 'Certainly, I should say, that there is nothing.' 'Then,'
she said, 'the simple truth is, that men love the good.' 'Yes,' I said.
'To which must be added that they love the possession of the good?' 'Yes,
that must be added.' 'And not only the possession, but the everlasting
possession of the good?' 'That must be added too.' 'Then love,' she said,
'may be described generally as the love of the everlasting possession of
the good?' 'That is most true.'</p>
<p>'Then if this be the nature of love, can you tell me further,' she said,
'what is the manner of the pursuit? what are they doing who show all this
eagerness and heat which is called love? and what is the object which they
have in view? Answer me.' 'Nay, Diotima,' I replied, 'if I had known, I
should not have wondered at your wisdom, neither should I have come to
learn from you about this very matter.' 'Well,' she said, 'I will teach
you:—The object which they have in view is birth in beauty, whether
of body or soul.' 'I do not understand you,' I said; 'the oracle requires
an explanation.' 'I will make my meaning clearer,' she replied. 'I mean to
say, that all men are bringing to the birth in their bodies and in their
souls. There is a certain age at which human nature is desirous of
procreation—procreation which must be in beauty and not in
deformity; and this procreation is the union of man and woman, and is a
divine thing; for conception and generation are an immortal principle in
the mortal creature, and in the inharmonious they can never be. But the
deformed is always inharmonious with the divine, and the beautiful
harmonious. Beauty, then, is the destiny or goddess of parturition who
presides at birth, and therefore, when approaching beauty, the conceiving
power is propitious, and diffusive, and benign, and begets and bears
fruit: at the sight of ugliness she frowns and contracts and has a sense
of pain, and turns away, and shrivels up, and not without a pang refrains
from conception. And this is the reason why, when the hour of conception
arrives, and the teeming nature is full, there is such a flutter and
ecstasy about beauty whose approach is the alleviation of the pain of
travail. For love, Socrates, is not, as you imagine, the love of the
beautiful only.' 'What then?' 'The love of generation and of birth in
beauty.' 'Yes,' I said. 'Yes, indeed,' she replied. 'But why of
generation?' 'Because to the mortal creature, generation is a sort of
eternity and immortality,' she replied; 'and if, as has been already
admitted, love is of the everlasting possession of the good, all men will
necessarily desire immortality together with good: Wherefore love is of
immortality.'</p>
<p>All this she taught me at various times when she spoke of love. And I
remember her once saying to me, 'What is the cause, Socrates, of love, and
the attendant desire? See you not how all animals, birds, as well as
beasts, in their desire of procreation, are in agony when they take the
infection of love, which begins with the desire of union; whereto is added
the care of offspring, on whose behalf the weakest are ready to battle
against the strongest even to the uttermost, and to die for them, and will
let themselves be tormented with hunger or suffer anything in order to
maintain their young. Man may be supposed to act thus from reason; but why
should animals have these passionate feelings? Can you tell me why?' Again
I replied that I did not know. She said to me: 'And do you expect ever to
become a master in the art of love, if you do not know this?' 'But I have
told you already, Diotima, that my ignorance is the reason why I come to
you; for I am conscious that I want a teacher; tell me then the cause of
this and of the other mysteries of love.' 'Marvel not,' she said, 'if you
believe that love is of the immortal, as we have several times
acknowledged; for here again, and on the same principle too, the mortal
nature is seeking as far as is possible to be everlasting and immortal:
and this is only to be attained by generation, because generation always
leaves behind a new existence in the place of the old. Nay even in the
life of the same individual there is succession and not absolute unity: a
man is called the same, and yet in the short interval which elapses
between youth and age, and in which every animal is said to have life and
identity, he is undergoing a perpetual process of loss and reparation—hair,
flesh, bones, blood, and the whole body are always changing. Which is true
not only of the body, but also of the soul, whose habits, tempers,
opinions, desires, pleasures, pains, fears, never remain the same in any
one of us, but are always coming and going; and equally true of knowledge,
and what is still more surprising to us mortals, not only do the sciences
in general spring up and decay, so that in respect of them we are never
the same; but each of them individually experiences a like change. For
what is implied in the word "recollection," but the departure of
knowledge, which is ever being forgotten, and is renewed and preserved by
recollection, and appears to be the same although in reality new,
according to that law of succession by which all mortal things are
preserved, not absolutely the same, but by substitution, the old worn-out
mortality leaving another new and similar existence behind—unlike
the divine, which is always the same and not another? And in this way,
Socrates, the mortal body, or mortal anything, partakes of immortality;
but the immortal in another way. Marvel not then at the love which all men
have of their offspring; for that universal love and interest is for the
sake of immortality.'</p>
<p>I was astonished at her words, and said: 'Is this really true, O thou wise
Diotima?' And she answered with all the authority of an accomplished
sophist: 'Of that, Socrates, you may be assured;—think only of the
ambition of men, and you will wonder at the senselessness of their ways,
unless you consider how they are stirred by the love of an immortality of
fame. They are ready to run all risks greater far than they would have run
for their children, and to spend money and undergo any sort of toil, and
even to die, for the sake of leaving behind them a name which shall be
eternal. Do you imagine that Alcestis would have died to save Admetus, or
Achilles to avenge Patroclus, or your own Codrus in order to preserve the
kingdom for his sons, if they had not imagined that the memory of their
virtues, which still survives among us, would be immortal? Nay,' she said,
'I am persuaded that all men do all things, and the better they are the
more they do them, in hope of the glorious fame of immortal virtue; for
they desire the immortal.</p>
<p>'Those who are pregnant in the body only, betake themselves to women and
beget children—this is the character of their love; their offspring,
as they hope, will preserve their memory and giving them the blessedness
and immortality which they desire in the future. But souls which are
pregnant—for there certainly are men who are more creative in their
souls than in their bodies—conceive that which is proper for the
soul to conceive or contain. And what are these conceptions?—wisdom
and virtue in general. And such creators are poets and all artists who are
deserving of the name inventor. But the greatest and fairest sort of
wisdom by far is that which is concerned with the ordering of states and
families, and which is called temperance and justice. And he who in youth
has the seed of these implanted in him and is himself inspired, when he
comes to maturity desires to beget and generate. He wanders about seeking
beauty that he may beget offspring—for in deformity he will beget
nothing—and naturally embraces the beautiful rather than the
deformed body; above all when he finds a fair and noble and well-nurtured
soul, he embraces the two in one person, and to such an one he is full of
speech about virtue and the nature and pursuits of a good man; and he
tries to educate him; and at the touch of the beautiful which is ever
present to his memory, even when absent, he brings forth that which he had
conceived long before, and in company with him tends that which he brings
forth; and they are married by a far nearer tie and have a closer
friendship than those who beget mortal children, for the children who are
their common offspring are fairer and more immortal. Who, when he thinks
of Homer and Hesiod and other great poets, would not rather have their
children than ordinary human ones? Who would not emulate them in the
creation of children such as theirs, which have preserved their memory and
given them everlasting glory? Or who would not have such children as
Lycurgus left behind him to be the saviours, not only of Lacedaemon, but
of Hellas, as one may say? There is Solon, too, who is the revered father
of Athenian laws; and many others there are in many other places, both
among Hellenes and barbarians, who have given to the world many noble
works, and have been the parents of virtue of every kind; and many temples
have been raised in their honour for the sake of children such as theirs;
which were never raised in honour of any one, for the sake of his mortal
children.</p>
<p>'These are the lesser mysteries of love, into which even you, Socrates,
may enter; to the greater and more hidden ones which are the crown of
these, and to which, if you pursue them in a right spirit, they will lead,
I know not whether you will be able to attain. But I will do my utmost to
inform you, and do you follow if you can. For he who would proceed aright
in this matter should begin in youth to visit beautiful forms; and first,
if he be guided by his instructor aright, to love one such form only—out
of that he should create fair thoughts; and soon he will of himself
perceive that the beauty of one form is akin to the beauty of another; and
then if beauty of form in general is his pursuit, how foolish would he be
not to recognize that the beauty in every form is and the same! And when
he perceives this he will abate his violent love of the one, which he will
despise and deem a small thing, and will become a lover of all beautiful
forms; in the next stage he will consider that the beauty of the mind is
more honourable than the beauty of the outward form. So that if a virtuous
soul have but a little comeliness, he will be content to love and tend
him, and will search out and bring to the birth thoughts which may improve
the young, until he is compelled to contemplate and see the beauty of
institutions and laws, and to understand that the beauty of them all is of
one family, and that personal beauty is a trifle; and after laws and
institutions he will go on to the sciences, that he may see their beauty,
being not like a servant in love with the beauty of one youth or man or
institution, himself a slave mean and narrow-minded, but drawing towards
and contemplating the vast sea of beauty, he will create many fair and
noble thoughts and notions in boundless love of wisdom; until on that
shore he grows and waxes strong, and at last the vision is revealed to him
of a single science, which is the science of beauty everywhere. To this I
will proceed; please to give me your very best attention:</p>
<p>'He who has been instructed thus far in the things of love, and who has
learned to see the beautiful in due order and succession, when he comes
toward the end will suddenly perceive a nature of wondrous beauty (and
this, Socrates, is the final cause of all our former toils)—a nature
which in the first place is everlasting, not growing and decaying, or
waxing and waning; secondly, not fair in one point of view and foul in
another, or at one time or in one relation or at one place fair, at
another time or in another relation or at another place foul, as if fair
to some and foul to others, or in the likeness of a face or hands or any
other part of the bodily frame, or in any form of speech or knowledge, or
existing in any other being, as for example, in an animal, or in heaven,
or in earth, or in any other place; but beauty absolute, separate, simple,
and everlasting, which without diminution and without increase, or any
change, is imparted to the ever-growing and perishing beauties of all
other things. He who from these ascending under the influence of true
love, begins to perceive that beauty, is not far from the end. And the
true order of going, or being led by another, to the things of love, is to
begin from the beauties of earth and mount upwards for the sake of that
other beauty, using these as steps only, and from one going on to two, and
from two to all fair forms, and from fair forms to fair practices, and
from fair practices to fair notions, until from fair notions he arrives at
the notion of absolute beauty, and at last knows what the essence of
beauty is. This, my dear Socrates,' said the stranger of Mantineia, 'is
that life above all others which man should live, in the contemplation of
beauty absolute; a beauty which if you once beheld, you would see not to
be after the measure of gold, and garments, and fair boys and youths,
whose presence now entrances you; and you and many a one would be content
to live seeing them only and conversing with them without meat or drink,
if that were possible—you only want to look at them and to be with
them. But what if man had eyes to see the true beauty—the divine
beauty, I mean, pure and clear and unalloyed, not clogged with the
pollutions of mortality and all the colours and vanities of human life—thither
looking, and holding converse with the true beauty simple and divine?
Remember how in that communion only, beholding beauty with the eye of the
mind, he will be enabled to bring forth, not images of beauty, but
realities (for he has hold not of an image but of a reality), and bringing
forth and nourishing true virtue to become the friend of God and be
immortal, if mortal man may. Would that be an ignoble life?'</p>
<p>Such, Phaedrus—and I speak not only to you, but to all of you—were
the words of Diotima; and I am persuaded of their truth. And being
persuaded of them, I try to persuade others, that in the attainment of
this end human nature will not easily find a helper better than love: And
therefore, also, I say that every man ought to honour him as I myself
honour him, and walk in his ways, and exhort others to do the same, and
praise the power and spirit of love according to the measure of my ability
now and ever.</p>
<p>The words which I have spoken, you, Phaedrus, may call an encomium of
love, or anything else which you please.</p>
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