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Alphabetical [« »] licymnius 1 lie 7 lies 4 life 45 life-long 1 lifts 1 light 14 | Frequency [« »] 48 time 46 knowledge 46 world 45 life 45 mind 45 very 45 whether | Plato Phaedrus IntraText - Concordances life |
Dialogue
1 Phaedr| nectar to drink. This is the life of the gods; the human soul 2 Phaedr| succession has chosen the life of a philosopher or of a 3 Phaedr| if they choose the lower life of ambition they may still 4 Phaedr| important act of his or her life’? Who would willingly enter 5 Phaedr| would describe their way of life after marriage; how they 6 Phaedr| world and stirring scenes of life and action which would make 7 Phaedr| of married and domestic life. They are evils which mankind 8 Phaedr| their first entrance on life. And although their love 9 Phaedr| this saying’: in the lower life of ambition they may be 10 Phaedr| that at one time of his life Plato was quite serious 11 Phaedr| hopes of this and another life seemed to centre. To him 12 Phaedr| righteously in the condition of life to which fate has called 13 Phaedr| element of chance in human life, and yet asserts the freedom 14 Phaedr| there is the hint that human life is a life of aspiration 15 Phaedr| hint that human life is a life of aspiration only, and 16 Phaedr| personified, the ideal made Life.~Yet in both these statements 17 Phaedr| unknown period of Plato’s life, after he had deserted the 18 Phaedr| nature of the philosophic life, and the character of the 19 Phaedr| God in this or in another life may reveal to her.~ON THE 20 Phaedr| Latin, which has come to life in new forms and been developed 21 Phaedr| in oratory. The ways of life were luxurious and commonplace. 22 Phaedr| literary excellence. It had no life or aspiration, no national 23 Phaedr| joys and refinements of life; it increases its dulness 24 Phaedr| elixir which can restore life and youth to the literature 25 Phaedr| continue your friends through life; nor to those who, when 26 Phaedr| the idea that his way of life is bad, but no one of his 27 Phaedr| of you, and as large as life.~SOCRATES: You are a dear 28 Phaedr| his master, whose law of life is pleasure and not good, 29 Phaedr| rest of a piece?—such a life as any one can imagine and 30 Phaedr| any of the great crises of life, will be the anxiety of 31 Phaedr| both in public and private life, but when in their senses 32 Phaedr| nectar to drink.~Such is the life of the gods; but of other 33 Phaedr| the fifth shall lead the life of a prophet or hierophant; 34 Phaedr| assigned; to the seventh the life of an artisan or husbandman; 35 Phaedr| and they who choose this life three times in succession 36 Phaedr| have completed their first life, and after the judgment 37 Phaedr| in a manner worthy of the life which they led here when 38 Phaedr| and choose their second life, and they may take any which 39 Phaedr| a man may pass into the life of a beast, or from the 40 Phaedr| rules and proprieties of life, on which he formerly prided 41 Phaedr| prevail, then they pass their life here in happiness and harmony— 42 Phaedr| philosophy and lead the lower life of ambition, then probably, 43 Phaedr| experience of them in actual life, and be able to follow them 44 Phaedr| painter have the attitude of life, and yet if you ask them 45 Phaedr| serious pursuit of their life.~PHAEDRUS: What name would