Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
Alphabetical [« »] afterwards 7 again 48 against 12 age 19 ages 10 agnus 1 ago 1 | Frequency [« »] 20 while 20 years 20 youth 19 age 19 best 19 end 19 opinion | Plato Phaedrus IntraText - Concordances age |
Dialogue
1 Phaedr| mighty disagreeable; ‘crabbed age and youth cannot live together.’ 2 Phaedr| great rhetoricians of the age, who desire to attain immortality 3 Phaedr| as a remedy against old age. The natural process will 4 Phaedr| himself. But seeing in his own age the impossibility of woman 5 Phaedr| mind of Socrates in another age and country; and we can 6 Phaedr| to the knowledge of the age. That philosophy should 7 Phaedr| Athenian literature in the age of Plato was degenerating 8 Phaedr| regard as the signs of an age wanting in original power.~ 9 Phaedr| the forgetfulness of old age, but to live is higher far, 10 Phaedr| Plato twenty-three years of age, and while Socrates himself 11 Phaedr| or twenty-three years of age. The cosmological notion 12 Phaedr| termed the Euhemerism of his age. For there were Euhemerists 13 Phaedr| conviction of truth. The age had no remembrance of the 14 Phaedr| been preserved.~Such an age of sciolism and scholasticism 15 Phaedr| greatest rhetorician of the age spent a long time in composing. 16 Phaedr| possessions with you in age; nor to those who, having 17 Phaedr| advance, at the appointed age and time, is led to receive 18 Phaedr| been human beings in an age before the Muses. And when 19 Phaedr| the forgetfulness of old age, by himself, or by any other