Part
1 Intro| service to the lover in the way of virtue which the lover
2 Intro| them to marry and go their way to the business of life.
3 Intro| designed to prepare the way for Socrates, who gathers
4 Intro| We may observe, by the way, (1) how the very appearance
5 Intro| pupils, not forgetting by the way to satirize the monotonous
6 Intro| opposites he explains in a new way as the harmony after discord;
7 Intro| another side; and there is ‘a way upwards and downwards,’
8 Intro| nature can no further go, by way of contrast to this extreme
9 Text | invent an excuse by the way (Iliad).~This was the style
10 Text | said my informant; he has a way of stopping anywhere and
11 Text | if there were only some way of contriving that a state
12 Text | turn out in this or that way according to the mode of
13 Text | remains, then, only one way of honourable attachment
14 Text | beloved, and this is the way of virtue; for as we admitted
15 Text | so the beloved has one way only of voluntary service
16 Text | pause—this is the balanced way in which I have been taught
17 Text | to praise Love in another way, unlike that either of Pausanias
18 Text | reflection, Zeus discovered a way. He said: ‘Methinks I have
19 Text | this is always the right way of praising everything.
20 Text | witness, fleeing out of the way of age, who is swift enough,
21 Text | all things, or wind his way into and out of every soul
22 Text | I do not praise in that way; no, indeed, I cannot. But
23 Text | afterwards of his works—that is a way of beginning which I very
24 Text | this will be the easiest way, and I shall take both parts
25 Text | incantation, find their way. For God mingles not with
26 Text | not another? And in this way, Socrates, the mortal body,
27 Text | the immortal in another way. Marvel not then at the
28 Text | attendants, he found his way to them. ‘Hail, friends,’
29 Text | seeing Socrates, who made way for him, and Alcibiades
30 Text | for me, and always, as his way is, coming out at all sorts
31 Text | manner. Not a bit; I made no way with him. Lastly, as I had
32 Text | you will assist me in the way of virtue, which I desire
33 Text | to the sun, and went his way (compare supra). I will
34 Text | resistance; and in this way he and his companion escaped—
35 Text | many others in the same way—beginning as their lover
36 Text | the point comes in by the way at the end; you want to
37 Text | praised by Socrates.~The usual way, said Alcibiades; where
38 Text | open, they had found their way in, and made themselves
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