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Alphabetical [« »] pnyx 4 poem 44 poema 2 poems 37 poesy 2 poet 163 poetarum 1 | Frequency [« »] 37 partaking 37 perceived 37 perpetual 37 poems 37 related 37 rhapsode 37 sitting | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances poems |
Charmides Part
1 PreS | dialogues of Plato are like poems, isolated and separate works, 2 Text | an actor who spoiled his poems in repeating them; so he Cratylus Part
3 Intro| authority of the Homeric poems, Socrates shows that the 4 Intro| may have been embodied in poems or hymns or laws, which 5 Intro| romances into which the Homeric Poems were converted, for a while 6 Intro| readers of them than the Poems themselves, and in time 7 Intro| the two was reversed: the poems which had once been a necessity The First Alcibiades Part
8 Text | is the argument of those poems?~ALCIBIADES: True.~SOCRATES: Ion Part
9 Text | compose their beautiful poems not by art, but because 10 Text | mouth, one of the finest poems ever written, simply an 11 Text | doubt that these beautiful poems are not human, or the work Laws Book
12 1 | too, must have heard his poems; our Lacedaemonian friend 13 2 | or one of the Hesiodic poems, and would award the victory 14 7 | selection, and any of the old poems which they deem sufficient 15 8 | noble actions—let their poems be sung, even though they 16 8 | and Orpheus; but only such poems as have been judged sacred Lysis Part
17 Text | he drenches us with his poems and other compositions, Parmenides Part
18 Text | is new. For you, in your poems, say The All is one, and Phaedo Part
19 Intro| hardly know what. Many noble poems and pictures have been suggested 20 Text | of rivalling him or his poems; to do so, as I knew, would Phaedrus Part
21 Intro| discourse and write about poems and paintings, but we seem 22 Intro| Sibylline books, Orphic poems, Byzantine imitations of 23 Text | Homer and other writers of poems, whether set to music or Protagoras Part
24 Text | they introduce him to the poems of other excellent poets, 25 Text | would rather have done with poems and odes, if he does not The Republic Book
26 1 | of authors for their own poems, or of parents for their 27 10 | of the arts to which his poems only incidentally refer: 28 10 | noblest subjects of his poems, and we may fairly ask him The Symposium Part
29 Text | whereas other gods have poems and hymns made in their Theaetetus Part
30 Intro| has a history. The Homeric poems contain no word for it; 31 Intro| gradually: in the Homeric poems, or even in the Hesiodic Timaeus Part
32 Intro| prizes for recitation. Some poems of Solon were recited by 33 Intro| physical science what the poems of Homer were to early Greek 34 Intro| day were to convert the poems of Homer into an allegory 35 Text | in many passages of his poems; and he told the story to 36 Text | for recitations, and the poems of several poets were recited 37 Text | and many of us sang the poems of Solon, which at that