

“ Socrates, ought you not to be giving some thought to what defence you are going to make?” That Socrates had at first replied, “Why, do I not seem to you to have spent my whole life in preparing to defend myself?” Then when he asked, “How so?” he had said, “Because all my life I have been guiltless of wrong-doing and that I consider the finest preparation for a defence.” Then when Hermogenes again asked, For he stated that on seeing Socrates discussing any and every subject rather than the trial, he had said: Hermogenes, the son of Hipponicus, however, was a companion of his and has given us reports of such a nature as to show that the sublimity of his speech was appropriate to the resolve he had made.


It is true that others have written about this, and that all of them have reproduced the loftiness of his words,-a fact which proves that his utterance really was of the character intimated -but they have not shown clearly that he had now come to the conclusion that for him death was more to be desired than life and hence his lofty utterance appears rather ill-considered. Apology of Socrates It seems to me fitting to hand down to memory, furthermore, how Socrates, on being indicted, deliberated on his defence and on his end.
