Book
1 2 | performance, and also lead younger men to welcome with dutiful
2 2 | fire, and grow softer and younger, and are easily moulded
3 3 | the son to the father—the younger to the elder.~Megillus.
4 3 | elder should rule and the younger obey?~Cleinias. To be sure.~
5 4 | children, and the elder the younger, and the noble the ignoble?
6 5 | elders to reverence the younger, and above all to take heed
7 5 | administering rebuke to the younger—in this way the object may
8 6 | to the same laws as the younger offender himself, and shall
9 6 | of all honour which the younger show to the elder; let no
10 7 | for them all, and that the younger they are, the more they
11 8 | the greater ones, let a younger generation regulate by law,
12 9 | things may be left to the younger generation of legislators
13 9 | has the precedence of the younger in honour, both among the
14 9 | elder man assaulted by a younger in the city; and it is reasonable
15 9 | who is at hand, not being younger than the combatants, nor
16 9 | person who is struck or younger, he shall defend the person
17 10| the Gods. But as to our younger generation and their wisdom,
18 12| they shall withdraw the younger of the two and do away with
19 12| the elders approve, the younger men shall learn with all
20 12| omitted may be supplied by the younger one. Private courts will
21 12| the trunk, and are not the younger guardians, who are chosen
22 12| counsel and making use of the younger men as their ministers,
23 12| which they conceived to be younger and not older than the body,
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