Book
1 1 | drinking, or not drinking, wine at all, but of intoxication.
2 1 | and women, drink unmixed wine, which they pour on their
3 1 | this—Does the drinking of wine heighten and increase pleasures
4 1 | the pastime of drinking wine, if we are right in supposing
5 1 | will say, Yes—meaning that wine is such a potion.~Athenian.
6 1 | other? When a man drinks wine he begins to be better pleased
7 1 | than the festive use of wine, in the first place to test,
8 2 | that boys shall not taste wine at all until they are eighteen
9 2 | afterwards they may taste wine in moderation up to the
10 2 | intoxication and from excess of wine; when, at length, he has
11 2 | elder men, making use of the wine which he has given men to
12 2 | received into the State. For wine has many excellences, and
13 2 | which reason he gave men wine. Such traditions concerning
14 2 | other story implied that wine was given man out of revenge,
15 2 | on the contrary, is, that wine was given him as a balm,
16 2 | should be allowed to taste wine at all, but that he should
17 2 | female, should ever drink wine; and that no magistrates
18 2 | judges while on duty taste wine at all, nor any one who
19 2 | laws ought not to drink wine, so that if what I say is
20 2 | crown of my discourse about wine, if you agree.~Cleinias.
21 3 | slayer himself, mad with wine and brutality, lost his
22 6 | in which the maddening wine is hot and fiery, but when
23 6 | festivals of the God who gave wine; and peculiarly dangerous,
24 8 | unfit for making raisins and wine, or for laying by as dried
25 8 | slaves, making an exchange of wine and food, which is commonly
26 10| their duty by “libations of wine and the savour of fat,”
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