[
3]
Not but what it would appear
that the end corresponding
1 to the
virtue of Courage is really pleasant, only its pleasantness is obscured by the attendant
circumstances. This is illustrated by the case of athletic contests: to boxers, for
example, their end—the object they box for, the wreath and the honors of
victory—is pleasant, but the blows they receive must hurt them, being men of
flesh and blood, and all the labor of training is painful; and these painful incidentals
are so numerous that the final object, being a small thing, appears not to contain any
pleasure at all.
[
4]
If then the same is true of Courage, the
death or wounds that it may bring will be painful to the courageous man, and he will
suffer them unwillingly; but he will endure them because it is noble to do so, or because
it is base not to do so. And the more complete his virtue, and the fuller the happiness he
has attained, the more pain will death cause him; for to such a man life is worth most,
and he stands to lose the greatest goods, and knows that this is so, and this must be
painful. But he is none the less courageous on that account, perhaps indeed he is more so,
because he prefers glory in war to the greatest prizes of life.
[
5]
It is not true therefore of every virtue that its active exercise is essentially
pleasant, save in so far as it attains its end.2
[6]
No doubt it is possible that such men as these do not make the best professional
soldiers, but men who are less courageous, and have nothing of value besides life to lose;
for these face danger readily, and