Book
1 2 | toils which our race is born to undergo, have appointed
2 6 | We will say to him who is born of good parents—O my son,
3 6 | that their offspring may be born of reasonable beings; for
4 6 | marriage, before children are born, will follow next in order.
5 6 | are, as I said, a heaven–born and admirable institution,
6 6 | their children are not yet born. And let the women whom
7 7 | both sexes to have been born, it will be proper for us
8 7 | amount of exercise upon newly–born infants?~Athenian. Nay,
9 7 | how:—Every animal that is born is wont to utter some cry,
10 7 | and least of all the newly–born infant, for in infancy more
11 7 | in the case of the free–born. Children at that age have
12 8 | as good as they will be born; but that if fear is dead
13 8 | beasts in general, who are born in great multitudes, and
14 9 | city. For if a man were born so divinely gifted that
15 10| and how after they were born they behaved to one another.
16 10| comes afterwards, and is born to obey the soul, which
17 11| slave; but if a child be born either of a slave by her
18 12| the laws.~Thus a man is born and brought up, and after
19 12| of all things which are born, and is immortal and rules
|