Book
1 1 | him to make laws for your cities?~Cleinias. Yes, that is
2 1 | race and live in the same cities may unjustly conspire, and
3 1 | fairly brought against your cities above all others, and is
4 1 | with you, who are only two cities?~Megillus. I shall gladly
5 2 | like that of dwellers in cities; and you have your young
6 2 | governor of a state and of cities. Such an one, as we said
7 3 | which has elapsed since cities first existed and men were
8 3 | thousands and thousands of cities come into being during this
9 3 | suggested to the dwellers in cities by interest or ambition,
10 3 | suppose, then, that the cities in the plain and on the
11 3 | True.~Athenian. And of cities or governments or legislation,
12 3 | that we now are and have: cities and governments, and arts
13 3 | all the good and evil of cities could have attained their
14 3 | of other arts, termed in cities legal practices and party
15 3 | increased the size of their cities, and betook themselves to
16 3 | conditions of polities and cities concur.~Cleinias. What is
17 3 | population increased, many other cities would begin to be inhabited.~
18 3 | Doubtless.~Athenian. Those cities made war against Troy—by
19 3 | soldiers returned to their own cities and families, they did not
20 3 | what are the destruction of cities, and what changes would
21 3 | portions, and settled three cities, Argos, Messene, Lacedaemon.~
22 3 | heroes made oath to three cities which were under a kingly
23 3 | kingly government, and the cities to the kings, that both
24 3 | which have regulated such cities? or what settlements of
25 3 | distributed between three cities by the royal brothers, sons
26 3 | which men rule and obey in cities, whether great or small;
27 3 | circumstance that of the three cities one only fought on behalf
28 3 | themselves, they devastate cities, and send fire and desolation
29 3 | mountains, and the removal of cities to the seashore, and of
30 4 | Peloponnesus.~Athenian. Cities find colonization in some
31 4 | And there have been whole cities which have taken flight
32 4 | appears to me to be of all cities the most democratical; and
33 4 | aggregations of men dwelling in cities who are the subjects and
34 4 | a long while before the cities came into being whose settlements
35 4 | kings and rulers of our cities; he did as we do with flocks
36 4 | which is true, declares that cities of which some mortal man
37 4 | public life, and regulate our cities and houses according to
38 5 | likely to be useful to all cities; and we are going to take
39 5 | an ordinance to all those cities, which obey and are administered
40 6 | reflect, we shall see that cities which are in process of
41 6 | by reason of inequality, cities are filled with seditions.
42 6 | which, when asked by other cities, a city should give an answer,
43 6 | conducive to the health of cities, and is also apt to produce
44 6 | to be superior to other cities, is a matter not at all
45 6 | common tables in places and cities in which they have never
46 7 | regulation of private life in cities, stability in the laying
47 7 | place in almost all our cities. A magistrate offers a public
48 7 | we said were to benefit cities by affording them an innocent
49 8 | our city among existing cities has fellow, either in respect
50 8 | become perfectly good; and cities are like individuals in
51 8 | come upon individuals and cities? How shall we devise a remedy
52 8 | you, still even in your cities the common meals of women
53 8 | providing food. Now, in cities the means of life are gained
54 9 | writings to be found in cities, and among them there, are
55 9 | writings to be found in cities, those which relate to laws,
56 10| seasons of the year, and in cities and governments has another
57 12| with faction, and make many cities out of one, and soon bring
58 12| can. The intercourse of cities with one another is apt
59 12| injury; but seeing that most cities are the reverse of well–
60 12| themselves rushing off into other cities, when any one either young
61 12| bad. And the generality of cities are quite right in exhorting
62 12| of the few well–ordered cities which the sun and the other
63 12| ordered as in well–ordered cities. These are they whom the
64 12| he is to exhibit to other cities a model of the guardians
65 12| flying over the sea to other cities, while the season lasts;
66 12| in temples, are in other cities provocative of envy, and
67 12| experience the common fate of cities in our day?~Cleinias. Wonder!
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