Part
1 Intro| they cannot tell what they want of one another. But if Hephaestus
2 Intro| very expression of their want. For love is the desire
3 Intro| that love is the child of want, and is not merely the love
4 Intro| of philosophy. The same want in the human soul which
5 Intro| seclusion of woman, and the want of a real family or social
6 Text | quite right, and therefore I want to offer him a contribution;
7 Text | become double. But when you want to use them in actual life,
8 Text | do not act thus from any want of shame, but because they
9 Text | them, ‘What do you people want of one another?’ they would
10 Text | be in a great strait.~You want to cast a spell over me,
11 Text | Agathon, that or any other want of refinement. And I am
12 Text | explain myself: I do not want you to say that love is
13 Text | this is, and tell me what I want to know—whether Love desires
14 Text | desires something is in want of something, and that he
15 Text | who desires nothing is in want of nothing, is in my judgment,
16 Text | he who is anything cannot want to be that which he is?~
17 Text | and health and strength, want to have the continuance
18 Text | not your meaning that you want to have what you now have
19 Text | not, and of which he is in want;—these are the sort of things
20 Text | Love, because he was in want, desires those good and
21 Text | things of which he is in want?’ ‘Yes, I did.’ ‘But how
22 Text | out, and so he is never in want and never in wealth; and,
23 Text | that of which he feels no want.’ ‘But who then, Diotima,’
24 Text | for I am conscious that I want a teacher; tell me then
25 Text | that were possible—you only want to look at them and to be
26 Text | we will obey. What do you want?~Well, said Eryximachus,
27 Text | the way at the end; you want to get up a quarrel between
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