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The Memorabilia gathers Xenophon's recollections of Socrates, arranged thematically as a sustained defense against charges of impiety and corruption. In concise dialogues and vignettes, Socrates tutors Euthydemus, Aristodemus, and even the hostile Anytus in practical ethics—self-control, justice, piety, friendship, and civic responsibility. Xenophon's lucid, unadorned prose favors exempla, preserving Prodicus's "Heracles at the Crossroads" and projecting a didactic counterpoint to Plato's dramatic elenchus. Xenophon—soldier, historian, and devoted pupil—writes with the pragmatism of a commander who marched with the Ten Thousand and later lived in Spartan-friendly exile at Scillus. Valuing discipline and utility, he shapes a Socrates concerned with everyday excellence and divine favor. Absent from the trial, he composed this work, alongside an Apology, to rebut calumny and memorialize the teacher who formed his ethics. Recommended to readers seeking an alternative, reliable witness to Socrates: it complements Plato while remaining accessible. Classicists, students of philosophy, and thoughtful generalists will find a clear guide to virtue tested amid postwar Athens—useful both as historical testimony and as a handbook for living.
Quickie Classics summarizes timeless works with precision, preserving the author's voice and keeping the prose clear, fast, and readable—distilled, never diluted. Enriched Edition extras: Introduction · Synopsis · Historical Context · Author Biography · Brief Analysis · 4 Reflection Q&As · Editorial Footnotes.