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The Gadfly's Final Stand — The Apology

The Apology - The Gadfly's Final Stand

Plato

The Apology

The Gadfly's Final Stand

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The Gadfly's Final Stand

The Apology by Plato

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Socrates asks the jury to hear him out. If they kill a man like him, they will injure themselves more than they injure him. Meletus and Anytus can kill, exile, or disenfranchise him, but a bad man cannot truly injure a better one. The greater evil falls on whoever takes a life unjustly. He says he argues not for himself but for Athens, which should not sin against God by condemning his gift to the city. He is a gadfly sent by God to sting a great noble steed grown sluggish with size. Kill him and the city may sleep until another gadfly arrives. The proof of his mission is poverty: he neglected his own affairs for years, exhorting citizens like a father or brother, and never took pay. His divine sign, a voice that forbids but never commands, kept him out of politics because an honest man fighting a corrupt multitude does not survive long in public office. He offers actions, not words. As a senator he alone opposed trying the Arginusae generals illegally as a group, standing firm though orators threatened arrest and the crowd shouted. Under the Thirty Tyrants he refused an order to fetch Leon of Salamis for execution while four others obeyed. He went home instead, risking death, because wrongdoing mattered more than fear. He denies having secret disciples or paid teaching. Anyone may listen; he professes to teach nothing. If he corrupted the young, their fathers and brothers should accuse him now. Instead Crito, Lysanias, Antiphon, Nicostratus, Adeimantus, whose brother Plato is present, and many others are ready to witness for the man Meletus calls a corrupter. They support him, Socrates says, because they know he speaks truth and Meletus lies.

In this chapter: Terms Characters Key Quotes Themes Modern Story

Why This Matters

Connect literature to life

Skill: Reading Power Dynamics

Institutions often treat their most useful critics as enemies because comfort feels safer than wakefulness. Socrates tells the jury that killing him will injure Athens, then names fathers and brothers in court who support him against Meletus's corruption charge. The chapter teaches you to read when authority resists a gadfly because the questions threaten the arrangement, not because the questions are wrong.

Coming Up in Chapter 9

Having made his case, Socrates must now address a different kind of challenge: why he won't resort to the emotional appeals and theatrical displays that other defendants use to win sympathy from the jury.

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Chapter 08

The Gadfly's Final Stand

understanding between us that you should hear me to the end: I have something more to say, at which you may be inclined to cry out; but I believe that to hear me will be good for you, and therefore I beg that you will not cry out. I would have you know, that if you kill such an one as I am, you will injure yourselves more than you will injure me. Nothing will injure me, not Meletus nor yet Anytus—they cannot, for a bad man is not permitted to injure a better than himself. I do not deny that Anytus may, perhaps, kill him, or drive him into exile, or deprive him of civil rights; and he may imagine, and others may imagine, that he is inflicting a great injury upon him: but there I do not agree. For the evil of doing as he is doing—the evil of unjustly taking away the life of another—is greater far.

And now, Athenians, I am not going to argue for my own sake, as you may think, but for yours, that you may not sin against the God by condemning me, who am his gift to you. For if you kill me you will not easily find a successor to me, who, if I may use such a ludicrous figure of speech, am a sort of gadfly, given to the state by God; and the state is a great and noble steed who is tardy in his motions owing to his very size, and requires to be stirred into life. I am that gadfly which God has attached to the state, and all day long and in all places am always fastening upon you, arousing and persuading and reproaching you. You will not easily find another like me, and therefore I would advise you to spare me. I dare say that you may feel out of temper (like a person who is suddenly awakened from sleep), and you think that you might easily strike me dead as Anytus advises, and then you would sleep on for the remainder of your lives, unless God in his care of you sent you another gadfly. When I say that I am given to you by God, the proof of my mission is this:—if I had been like other men, I should not have neglected all my own concerns or patiently seen the neglect of them during all these years, and have been doing yours, coming to you individually like a father or elder brother, exhorting you to regard virtue; such conduct, I say, would be unlike human nature. If I had gained anything, or if my exhortations had been paid, there would have been some sense in my doing so; but now, as you will perceive, not even the impudence of my accusers dares to say that I have ever exacted or sought pay of any one; of that they have no witness. And I have a sufficient witness to the truth of what I say—my poverty.

Some one may wonder why I go about in private giving advice and busying myself with the concerns of others, but do not venture to come forward in public and advise the state. I will tell you why. You have heard me speak at sundry times and in divers places of an oracle or sign which comes to me, and is the divinity which Meletus ridicules in the indictment. This sign, which is a kind of voice, first began to come to me when I was a child; it always forbids but never commands me to do anything which I am going to do. This is what deters me from being a politician. And rightly, as I think. For I am certain, O men of Athens, that if I had engaged in politics, I should have perished long ago, and done no good either to you or to myself. And do not be offended at my telling you the truth: for the truth is, that no man who goes to war with you or any other multitude, honestly striving against the many lawless and unrighteous deeds which are done in a state, will save his life; he who will fight for the right, if he would live even for a brief space, must have a private station and not a public one.

I can give you convincing evidence of what I say, not words only, but what you value far more—actions. Let me relate to you a passage of my own life which will prove to you that I should never have yielded to injustice from any fear of death, and that “as I should have refused to yield” I must have died at once. I will tell you a tale of the courts, not very interesting perhaps, but nevertheless true. The only office of state which I ever held, O men of Athens, was that of senator: the tribe Antiochis, which is my tribe, had the presidency at the trial of the generals who had not taken up the bodies of the slain after the battle of Arginusae; and you proposed to try them in a body, contrary to law, as you all thought afterwards; but at the time I was the only one of the Prytanes who was opposed to the illegality, and I gave my vote against you; and when the orators threatened to impeach and arrest me, and you called and shouted, I made up my mind that I would run the risk, having law and justice with me, rather than take part in your injustice because I feared imprisonment and death. This happened in the days of the democracy. But when the oligarchy of the Thirty was in power, they sent for me and four others into the rotunda, and bade us bring Leon the Salaminian from Salamis, as they wanted to put him to death. This was a specimen of the sort of commands which they were always giving with the view of implicating as many as possible in their crimes; and then I showed, not in word only but in deed, that, if I may be allowed to use such an expression, I cared not a straw for death, and that my great and only care was lest I should do an unrighteous or unholy thing. For the strong arm of that oppressive power did not frighten me into doing wrong; and when we came out of the rotunda the other four went to Salamis and fetched Leon, but I went quietly home. For which I might have lost my life, had not the power of the Thirty shortly afterwards come to an end. And many will witness to my words.

Now do you really imagine that I could have survived all these years, if I had led a public life, supposing that like a good man I had always maintained the right and had made justice, as I ought, the first thing? No indeed, men of Athens, neither I nor any other man. But I have been always the same in all my actions, public as well as private, and never have I yielded any base compliance to those who are slanderously termed my disciples, or to any other. Not that I have any regular disciples. But if any one likes to come and hear me while I am pursuing my mission, whether he be young or old, he is not excluded. Nor do I converse only with those who pay; but any one, whether he be rich or poor, may ask and answer me and listen to my words; and whether he turns out to be a bad man or a good one, neither result can be justly imputed to me; for I never taught or professed to teach him anything. And if any one says that he has ever learned or heard anything from me in private which all the world has not heard, let me tell you that he is lying.

But I shall be asked, Why do people delight in continually conversing with you? I have told you already, Athenians, the whole truth about this matter: they like to hear the cross-examination of the pretenders to wisdom; there is amusement in it. Now this duty of cross-examining other men has been imposed upon me by God; and has been signified to me by oracles, visions, and in every way in which the will of divine power was ever intimated to any one. This is true, O Athenians, or, if not true, would be soon refuted. If I am or have been corrupting the youth, those of them who are now grown up and have become sensible that I gave them bad advice in the days of their youth should come forward as accusers, and take their revenge; or if they do not like to come themselves, some of their relatives, fathers, brothers, or other kinsmen, should say what evil their families have suffered at my hands. Now is their time. Many of them I see in the court. There is Crito, who is of the same age and of the same deme with myself, and there is Critobulus his son, whom I also see. Then again there is Lysanias of Sphettus, who is the father of Aeschines—he is present; and also there is Antiphon of Cephisus, who is the father of Epigenes; and there are the brothers of several who have associated with me. There is Nicostratus the son of Theosdotides, and the brother of Theodotus (now Theodotus himself is dead, and therefore he, at any rate, will not seek to stop him); and there is Paralus the son of Demodocus, who had a brother Theages; and Adeimantus the son of Ariston, whose brother Plato is present; and Aeantodorus, who is the brother of Apollodorus, whom I also see. I might mention a great many others, some of whom Meletus should have produced as witnesses in the course of his speech; and let him still produce them, if he has forgotten—I will make way for him. And let him say, if he has any testimony of the sort which he can produce. Nay, Athenians, the very opposite is the truth. For all these are ready to witness on behalf of the corrupter, of the injurer of their kindred, as Meletus and Anytus call me; not the corrupted youth only—there might have been a motive for that—but their uncorrupted elder relatives. Why should they too support me with their testimony? Why, indeed, except for the sake of truth and justice, and because they know that I am speaking the truth, and that Meletus is a liar.

Well, Athenians, this and the like of this is all the defence which I

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Key Quotes & Analysis

"if you kill such an one as I am, you will injure yourselves more than you will injure me."

— Socrates

Context: Opening the gadfly section by reframing who bears the real harm of condemnation

The trial looks like an attack on Socrates. He insists the moral injury runs the other way. Unjust condemnation damages the city that commits it.

In Today's Words:

Getting rid of me will hurt you more than it hurts me.

"For if you kill me you will not easily find a successor to me, who, if I may use such a ludicrous figure of speech, am a sort of gadfly, given to the state by God; and the state is a great and noble steed who is tardy in his motions owing to his very size, and requires to be stirred into life."

— Socrates

Context: Explaining his civic role with the famous gadfly metaphor

He knows the image sounds absurd and uses it anyway. The city needs irritation to stay awake. Comfort is the danger, not the sting.

In Today's Words:

Athens is a big sleepy horse, and I am the fly God sent to keep it moving.

"Why should they too support me with their testimony? Why, indeed, except for the sake of truth and justice, and because they know that I am speaking the truth, and that Meletus is a liar."

— Socrates

Context: Closing by pointing to fathers and brothers in court who support him instead of accusing him

If he corrupted the young, their elders would have motive to destroy him. Instead they witness for him. The absence of accusers inside the family is evidence.

In Today's Words:

The fathers and brothers of the people I supposedly ruined are here backing me up. Ask yourself why.

Thematic Threads

Class

In This Chapter

Socrates uses his poverty as proof of integrity, showing how economic status can signal moral character

Development

Builds on earlier themes of wealth versus wisdom, now explicitly connecting financial status to credibility

In Your Life:

You might notice how people judge your character based on your economic situation rather than your actions

Identity

In This Chapter

Socrates fully embraces his role as Athens' gadfly, defining himself through his function rather than status

Development

Evolution from defending his methods to claiming his essential purpose in society

In Your Life:

You might struggle between being who others want you to be versus embracing your true role in your community

Social Expectations

In This Chapter

Socrates explains why he avoided politics: the system punishes honesty and rewards corruption

Development

Deepens earlier exploration of why good people often avoid public roles

In Your Life:

You might find yourself choosing between advancing in broken systems or maintaining your principles

Personal Growth

In This Chapter

Socrates shows growth through concrete examples of choosing principle over safety

Development

Moves from abstract philosophy to specific moments of moral courage

In Your Life:

You might recognize moments when you had to choose between what's right and what's safe

Human Relationships

In This Chapter

Socrates points to the families of his supposed victims as character witnesses

Development

Introduced here as evidence of his true impact on those closest to his work

In Your Life:

You might realize that the people who know you best are your most credible character witnesses

You now have the context. Time to form your own thoughts.

Discussion Questions

  1. 1

    Socrates compares himself to a gadfly stinging a lazy horse. What specific examples does he give to prove he's been doing this job his whole life?

    analysis • surface
  2. 2

    Why does Socrates argue that his poverty actually proves his innocence? What does this reveal about how real corruption works?

    analysis • medium
  3. 3

    Think about your workplace, family, or community. Who serves as the 'gadfly' asking uncomfortable but necessary questions? How do people typically respond to them?

    application • medium
  4. 4

    Socrates chose to oppose illegal actions even when it put him in danger. When have you had to choose between safety and doing what's right? What factors influenced your decision?

    application • deep
  5. 5

    What does this chapter suggest about why societies often silence their most valuable critics? How can we distinguish between destructive troublemakers and necessary gadflies?

    reflection • deep

Critical Thinking Exercise

10 minutes

Map Your Gadfly Encounters

Think of three people who have made you uncomfortable by questioning something you believed or did. For each person, write down what they challenged, how you initially reacted, and whether you later realized they had a point. Then identify one area in your own life where you might need to be the gadfly for someone else.

Consider:

  • •Consider both personal relationships and professional situations
  • •Look for patterns in how you respond to uncomfortable feedback
  • •Think about the difference between criticism meant to help versus criticism meant to harm

Journaling Prompt

Write about a time when you had to choose between speaking up about something wrong and staying quiet to avoid conflict. What factors influenced your decision, and how do you feel about that choice now?

Coming Up Next...

Chapter 9: Dignity Over Desperation

Having made his case, Socrates must now address a different kind of challenge: why he won't resort to the emotional appeals and theatrical displays that other defendants use to win sympathy from the jury.

Continue to Chapter 9
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Standing Your Ground Under Fire
Contents
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Dignity Over Desperation
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