[28]
All this has availed me nothing; on the contrary, I who have lived to this advanced age without complaint from anyone could not be in greater jeopardy if I had wronged all the world.Yet I am not utterly discouraged because I face so great a penalty;1 no, if you will only hear me with good will, I am very confident that those who have been misled as to my pursuits and have been won over by my would-be slanderers will promptly change their views, while those who think of me as I really am will be still more confirmed in their opinion.
1 Isocrates seems to pretend throughout that he, like Socrates, is being tried on a capital charge.