Aschenbach felt intoxicated by the sun and
ocean and had a delirious vision. In the vision, he was in an idyllic scene under a tree outside of Athens (the setting of Plato’s
Phaedrus). Aschenbach’s vision recreated Plato’s dialogue, with the old, ugly Socrates teaching the young, attractive Phaedrus. Aschenbach imagined Socrates, lusting after Phaedrus, saying, “beauty is the path taken by the man of feeling to attain the intellectual—only the path, only a means, young Phaedrus.”