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Alphabetical [« »] statement 3 statements 1 states 13 statesman 23 statesmanship 1 statesmen 16 stating 1 | Frequency [« »] 23 hear 23 laws 23 natural 23 statesman 22 admit 22 allow 22 among | Plato Gorgias IntraText - Concordances statesman |
Dialogue
1 Gorg| admitted that this is the statesman’s proper business. And we 2 Gorg| could not have been a good statesman. The same tale might be 3 Gorg| The inference is, that the statesman of a past age were no better 4 Gorg| him to death.’ As if the statesman should not have taught the 5 Gorg| the true and who the false statesman?—~The true statesman is 6 Gorg| false statesman?—~The true statesman is he who brings order out 7 Gorg| which he has to solve.~The statesman who places before himself 8 Gorg| at their hands.~The true statesman is aware that he must adapt 9 Gorg| undervalue the power of a statesman, neither adopting the ‘laissez 10 Gorg| governments make or cure. The statesman is well aware that a great 11 Gorg| man, so does the actual statesman fall short of the ideal. 12 Gorg| powers. No matter whether a statesman makes high professions or 13 Gorg| strong for the ideas of the statesman who takes a comprehensive 14 Gorg| longer await an English statesman, any one who is not actuated 15 Gorg| imagine with Plato an ideal statesman in whom practice and speculation 16 Gorg| times, like the Italian statesman Cavour, have created the 17 Gorg| fable, occurring in the Statesman, in which the life of innocence 18 Gorg| language.~The myth in the Statesman relates to a former cycle 19 Gorg| make you as you desire, a statesman and orator: for every man 20 Gorg| Pericles was not a good statesman?~CALLICLES: That is, upon 21 Gorg| shown himself to be a good statesman— you admitted that this 22 Gorg| cry is all a lie; for no statesman ever could be unjustly put 23 Gorg| The case of the professed statesman is, I believe, very much