Book
1 1 | nursery. The soul of the child in his play should be guided
2 1 | which he was when a young child?~Cleinias. He does.~Athenian.
3 1 | becomes a second time a child?~Cleinias. Well said, Stranger.~
4 1 | himself at every draught as a child of misfortune, and that
5 2 | then, that the soul of the child may not be habituated to
6 2 | because the mind of the child is incapable of enduring
7 3 | injustice, which is the child of excess. I mean to say,
8 6 | parents. But in early days the child, as in a family, loves and
9 6 | beginning of existence to every child, whether boy or girl. Let
10 7 | readily comply with the child’s wishes instead of deterring
11 7 | branches of knowledge as every child in Egypt is taught when
12 9 | himself no better than a child. And if this be made evident
13 9 | they have deprived of a child or of a brother. And he
14 9 | of his wounds. And if a child intentionally wound his
15 9 | and every man, woman, or child ought to consider that the
16 10| in us inactivity is the child of cowardice, and carelessness
17 11| lost his son, when he was a child, and before he could be
18 11| in the sixth degree, the child of his father’s sister.
19 11| as though he were his own child, and he shall be as careful
20 11| he be a guardian of the child, may be fined by a magistrate,
21 11| his life; let him be as a child dwelling in the house for
22 11| the eye of the law. When a child is admitted to be the offspring
23 11| decision as to which parent the child is to follow—in case a female
24 11| master of the slave; but if a child be born either of a slave
25 11| slave of either sex and a child shall be allowed to give
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