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Bravery in unforeseen danger springs more
from character, as there is less time for preparation; one might resolve to face a danger
one can foresee, from calculation and on principle, but only a fixed disposition of
Courage will enable one to face sudden peril.
[16]
(5) Those who face danger in ignorance also appear courageous; and they
come very near to those whose bravery rests on a sanguine temperament, though inferior to
them inasmuch as they lack self-confidence, which the sanguine possess. Hence the sanguine
stand firm for a time; whereas those who have been deceived as to the danger, if they
learn or suspect the true state of affairs, take to flight, as the Argives did when they
encountered the Lacedaemonians and thought they were Sicyonians.1
[17]
We have now described the characteristics both of the courageous and of those who are
thought to be courageous.9.
Courage is displayed with respect to confidence and fear, but not with respect to both
equally: it is more particularly displayed in regard to objects of fear; for one who is
unperturbed in the presence of terrors and comports himself rightly towards these is
courageous in a fuller sense than one who does so in situations that inspire confidence.
[2]
In fact, as has been said,2 men are sometimes called courageous for enduring pain.
Hence Courage itself is painful; and it is justly praised, because it is harder to endure
pain than to abstain from pleasure.
1 This occurred in the battle at the Long Walls of Corinth, 392 B.C. Lacedaemonian cavalry had dismounted and armed themselves with the shields of the routed Sicyonians, marked Σ (Xen. Hell. 4.4.10).
2 Cf. 4.4.