P. "But he was miserable, Socrates, till the statue became alive."
S. "They say so; but what has that to do with the argument?"
P. "I know not. But it seems to me horrible, as it did to Pygmalion, to be enamoured of anything which cannot return your love, but is, as it were, your puppet. Should we not think it a shameful thing, if a mistress were to be enamoured of one of her own slaves?"
S. "We should; and that, I suppose, because the slave would have no free choice whether to refuse or to return his mistress"s love; but would be compelled, being a slave, to submit to her, even if she were old, or ugly, or hateful to him?"
P. "Of course."
S. "And should we not say, Phaethon, that there was no true enjoyment in such love, even on the part of the mistress; nay, that it was not worthy of the name of love at all, but was merely something base, such as happens to animals?"
P. "We should say so rightly."
S. "Tell me, then, Phaethon-for a strange doubt has entered my mind on account of your words. This truth of which you were enamoured, seems, from what has been agreed, not to be a part of yourself, nor a creation of your own, like Pygmalion"s statue-how then has it not happened to you to be even more miserable than Pygmalion till you were sure that truth loved you in return?-and, moreover, till you were sure that truth had free choice as to whether it should return or refuse your love? For, otherwise, you would be in danger of being found suffering the same base pa.s.sion as a mistress enamoured of a slave who cannot resist her."
P. "I am puzzled, Socrates."
S. "Shall we rather say, then, that you were enamoured, not of truth itself, but of the spirit of truth? For we have been all along defining truth to be "facts as they are," have we not?"
P. "We have."
S. "But there are many facts as they are, whereof to be enamoured would be base, for they cannot return your love. As, for instance, that one and one make two, or that a horse has four legs. With respect to such facts, you would be, would you not, in the same position as a mistress towards her slave?"
P. "Certainly. It seems, then, better to a.s.sume the other alternative."
S. "It does. But does it not follow, that when you were enamoured of this spirit, you did not possess it?"
P. "I fear so, by the argument."
S. "And I fear, too, that we agreed that he only who possessed the spirit of truth saw facts as they are; for that was involved in our definition of the spirit of truth."
P. "But, Socrates, I knew, at least, that one and one made two, and that a horse had four legs. I must then have seen some facts as they are."
S. "Doubtless, fair boy; but not all."
P. "I do not pretend to that."
S. "But if you had possessed the spirit of truth, you would have seen all facts whatsoever as they are. For he who possesses a thing can surely employ it freely for all purposes which are not contrary to the nature of that thing; can he not?"
P. "Of course he can. But if I did not possess the spirit of truth, how could I see any truth whatsoever?"
S. "Suppose, dear boy, that instead of your possessing it, it were possible for it to possess you; and possessing you, to show you as much of itself, or as little, as it might choose, and concerning such things only as it might choose: would not that explain the dilemma?"
P. "It would a.s.suredly."
S. "Let us see, then, whether this spirit of truth may not be something which is capable of possessing you, and employing you, rather than of being possessed and employed by you. To me, indeed, this spirit seems likely to be some demon or deity, and that one of the greatest."
P. "Why then?"
S. "Can lifeless and material things see?"
P. "Certainly not; only live ones."
S. "This spirit, then, seems to be living; for it sees things as they are."
P. "Yes."
S. "And it is also intellectual; for intellectual facts can be only seen by an intellectual being."
P. "True."
S. "And also moral; for moral facts can only be seen by a moral being."
P. "True also."
S. "But this spirit is evidently not a man; it remains therefore, that it must be some demon."
P. "But why one of the greatest?"
S. "Tell me, Phaethon, is not G.o.d to be numbered among facts as they are?"
P. "a.s.suredly; for he is before all others and more eternal and absolute than all."
S. "Then this spirit of truth must also be able to see G.o.d as he is."
P. "It is probable."
S. "And certain, if, as we agreed, it be the very spirit which sees all facts whatsoever as they are. Now tell me, can the less see the greater as it is?"
P. "I think not; for an animal cannot see a man as he is, but only that part of him in which he is like an animal, namely, his outward figure and his animal pa.s.sions; but not his moral sense or reason, for of them it has itself no share."
S. "True; and in like wise, a man of less intellect could not see a man of greater intellect than himself as he is, but only a part of his intellect."
P. "Certainly."
S. "And does not the same thing follow from what we said just now, that G.o.d"s conceptions of himself must be the only perfect conceptions of him? For if any being could see G.o.d as he is, the same would be able to conceive of him as he is: which we agreed was impossible."
P. "True."
S. "Then surely this spirit which sees G.o.d as he is, must be equal with G.o.d."
P. "It seems probable; but none is equal to G.o.d except himself."
S. "Most true, Phaethon. But what shall we say now, but that this spirit of truth, whereof thou hast been enamoured, is, according to the argument, none other than Zeus, who alone comprehends all things, and sees them as they are, because he alone has given to each its inward and necessary laws?"
P. "But, Socrates, there seems something impious in the thought."
S. "Impious, truly, if we held that this spirit of truth was a part of your own self. But we agreed that it was not a part of you, but something utterly independent of you."