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The Apology
Part
1 Intro| character and policy of the great Pericles, and which at the
2 Intro| of his master in the last great scene? Did he intend to
3 Intro| mastered in the hands of the great dialectician. Perhaps he
4 Intro| not acting a part upon a great occasion, but he is what
5 Text | myself to be anything but a great speaker, did indeed appear
6 Text | have no wisdom, small or great. What then can he mean when
7 Text | question of you. You think a great deal about the improvement
8 Text | Meletus has no care at all, great or small, about the matter.
9 Text | friend,—a citizen of the great and mighty and wise city
10 Text | that he is inflicting a great injury upon him: but there
11 Text | God; and the state is a great and noble steed who is tardy
12 Text | straw for death, and that my great and only care was lest I
13 Text | also see. I might mention a great many others, some of whom
14 Text | cannot in a moment refute great slanders; and, as I am convinced
15 Text | interfere with you? Now I have great difficulty in making you
16 Text | shall see that there is great reason to hope that death
17 Text | private man, but even the great king will not find many
18 Text | examine the leader of the great Trojan expedition; or Odysseus
Charmides
Part
19 PreF | enabled to attain is in great measure due to these gentlemen,
20 PreF | much assistance from the great work of Mr. Grote, which
21 PreF | He is no dreamer, but a great philosophical genius struggling
22 PreF | gentle character, and the great services which he has rendered
23 PreS | Edition, I am under very great obligations to Mr. Matthew
24 PreS | and idiomatic words. But great care must be taken; for
25 PreS | writings.~Considering the great and fundamental differences
26 PreS | world swarmed with them; the great libraries stimulated the
27 PreS | events extending over a great number of years.~The external
28 PreS | which partakes of both.~With great respect for the learning
29 PreS | of course no doubt of the great influence exercised upon
30 PreS | To ‘the height of this great argument’ I do not propose
31 PreS | the striking remark of the great Scaliger respecting the
32 PreS | wholly opposing them. The great oppositions of the sensible
33 PreS | expostion’ (J. of Philol.). The great master of language wrote
34 Intro| to be determined by the great metaphysician. But even
35 Intro| definition which he has so great an interest in maintaining.
36 Intro| neighbourhood of several great truths, which he views in
37 Intro| sense, or by demanding too great exactness in the use of
38 Intro| the three boyhood has a great part. These reasons have
39 Text | the advanced guard of the great beauty, as he is thought
40 Text | between Critias and me. Great amusement was occasioned
41 Text | replied, for there is a great deal said about you among
42 Text | this,’ he said, ‘is the great error of our day in the
43 Text | Persia at the court of the great king, or on the continent
44 Text | that medicine is of very great use in producing health,
45 Text | and greater than other great things, but not greater
46 Text | not by others. And some great man, my friend, is wanted,
47 Text | would certainly have been a great advantage in being wise;
48 Text | what we spoke of as the great advantage of wisdom—to know
49 Text | house or state would be a great benefit.~How so? he said.~
50 Text | far too ready to admit the great benefits which mankind would
51 Text | I believe to be really a great good; and happy are you,
Cratylus
Part
52 Intro| fortunate individual, who had a great deal of time on his hands.’
53 Intro| going round.’ There is a great deal of ‘mischief’ lurking
54 Intro| men in the world, and a great many very bad; and the very
55 Intro| accomplished Sophist and the great benefactor of the other
56 Intro| sake of euphony. This is a great mystery which has been confided
57 Intro| euphony, and time is also a great alterer of words. For example,
58 Intro| object. The fact is, that great dictators of literature
59 Intro| patron of the flux, was a great enemy to stagnation. Kalon
60 Intro| word zemiodes is difficult; great changes, as I was saying,
61 Intro| affected by the women, who are great conservatives, iota and
62 Intro| sigma, zeta, which require a great deal of wind, are employed
63 Intro| philosophy—these two, are the two great formative principles of
64 Intro| this principle is liable to great abuse; and, like the ‘Deus
65 Intro| the tongue, Plato makes a great step in the physiology of
66 Intro| just been mentioned. His great insight in one direction
67 Intro| learn of things? There is a great controversy and high argument
68 Intro| speaking, and particularly great writers, or works which
69 Intro| characteristics of language. The great master has shown how he
70 Intro| are a drop or two of the great stream or ocean of speech
71 Intro| times the creations of the great writer who is the expression
72 Intro| like some of the other great secrets of nature,—the origin
73 Intro| philology has been very great. More languages have been
74 Intro| disturbing element. Like great writers in later times,
75 Intro| misleading, and yet has played so great a part in mental science,
76 Intro| with them. And behind the great structure of human speech
77 Intro| intended only to remind us that great poets like Aeschylus or
78 Intro| Sophocles or Pindar or a great prose writer like Thucydides
79 Intro| traditional grammar has still a great hold on the mind of the
80 Intro| be best discerned in the great crises of language, especially
81 Intro| times of suffering too great to be endured by the human
82 Intro| provincialisms, from the slang of great cities, from the argot of
83 Intro| unworthy to have a place in great languages and literatures.~
84 Intro| system of philosophy, however great may be the light which language
85 Intro| grown up wholly or in a great measure independently of
86 Intro| been sometimes made by a great poet the vehicle of his
87 Intro| Translation of the Bible, or again great classical works like Shakspere
88 Intro| through a whole nation, but a great step towards uniformity
89 Intro| English or French, possess as great a power of self-improvement
90 Intro| popular remark that our great writers are beginning to
91 Intro| remarked that whenever a great writer appears in the future
92 Intro| Latin. The wide diffusion of great authors would make such
93 Intro| the differences are too great to be overcome, and the
94 Intro| precious stones and jewels of great authors partake of the nature
95 Text | knowledge of names is a great part of knowledge. If I
96 Text | fifty-drachma course of the great Prodicus, which is a complete
97 Text | the inspiration from the great Euthyphro of the Prospaltian
98 Text | dare say that I am talking great nonsense.~HERMOGENES: Why,
99 Text | accomplished Sophist, and the great benefactor of the inhabitants
100 Text | the body. Now there is a great deal of philosophy and reflection
101 Text | that sort of thing has a great deal to do with language;
102 Text | SOCRATES: You impose a great many tasks upon me. Still,
103 Text | me, or there is some very great difficulty in the word.
104 Text | mechane to be a sign of great accomplishment —anein; for
105 Text | kakon, which has played so great a part in your previous
106 Text | For the name-giver was a great enemy to stagnation of all
107 Text | right I was in saying that great changes are made in the
108 Text | Hermogenes, that there is any great difficulty about them—edone
109 Text | pronunciation is accompanied by great expenditure of breath; these
110 Text | length, because they are great letters: omicron was the
111 Text | to which you call small great and great small—that, they
112 Text | you call small great and great small—that, they would say,
113 Text | analyses their meaning, is in great danger of being deceived?~
114 Text | already, and the result of a great deal of trouble and consideration
Critias
Part
115 Intro| trilogy, which, like the other great Platonic trilogy of the
116 Intro| have been made to find the great island of Atlantis, as to
117 Intro| Athens, the other was the great island of Atlantis. Critias
118 Intro| had a fair posterity, and great treasures derived from mines—
119 Intro| truth of the story is a great advantage: (2) the manner
120 Intro| affirmed to have been the great destruction: (7) the happy
121 Intro| 7) the happy guess that great geological changes have
122 Intro| opponents (cp. Rep.). Even in a great empire there might be a
123 Text | hearers about any subject is a great assistance to him who has
124 Text | and that you will need a great deal of indulgence before
125 Text | neighbourhood of the shore. Many great deluges have taken place
126 Text | was the third before the great destruction of Deucalion.
127 Text | The tale, which was of great length, began as follows:—~
128 Text | Moreover, there were a great number of elephants in the
129 Text | and there were many other great offerings of kings and of
130 Text | possessed true and in every way great spirits, uniting gentleness
131 Text | another, whereas by too great regard and respect for them,
Crito
Part
132 Text | Socrates, to be in such great trouble and unrest as you
133 Text | lose either the whole or a great part of our property; or
134 Text | you out of prison at no great cost; and as for the informers
135 Text | Thessaly, where there is great disorder and licence, they
Euthydemus
Part
136 Intro| logic, like some of our great physical philosophers, seem
137 Intro| of knowledge. These two great studies, the one destructive
138 Intro| interested auditor of the great discourse. But in the Euthydemus
139 Intro| Cleinias, the grandson of the great Alcibiades, and is desirous
140 Intro| of discussing one of his great puzzles. ‘Since wisdom is
141 Intro| Cleinias, interposes in great excitement, thinking that
142 Intro| like to be informed by the great master of the art, ‘What
143 Intro| retorted by Ctesippus, to the great delight of Cleinias, who
144 Intro| critic. ‘Not an orator, but a great composer of speeches.’ Socrates
145 Intro| his friends, and have a great notion of their own wisdom;
146 Intro| yet come into full life. Great philosophies like the Eleatic
147 Intro| second generation was a great and inspiring effort of
148 Intro| human mind was only with great difficulty disentangled
149 Intro| oscillation and transition. Two great truths seem to be indirectly
150 Text | I did not attend—I paid great attention to them, and I
151 Text | such a treasure than the great king is in the possession
152 Text | that, and you will confer a great favour on me and on every
153 Text | For example, if we had a great deal of food and did not
154 Text | food and did not eat, or a great deal of drink and did not
155 Text | evil.~And do they speak great things of the great, rejoined
156 Text | speak great things of the great, rejoined Euthydemus, and
157 Text | us in the character of a great logician, and who knows
158 Text | their art is a part of the great art of enchantment, and
159 Text | appear to have got into a great perplexity.~SOCRATES: Thereupon,
160 Text | wonderful thing, and what a great blessing! And do all other
161 Text | is a good?~Certainly, a great good, he said.~And you admit
162 Text | beautiful?~Now I was in a great quandary at having to answer
163 Text | contemplation of something great, he said: Tell me, Socrates,
164 Text | enabled you to acquire this great perfection in such a short
Euthyphro
Part
165 Intro| and morality, which the great poets Aeschylus, Sophocles,
166 Text | begun, he will be a very great public benefactor.~EUTHYPHRO:
167 Text | extraordinary man, and have made great strides in wisdom, before
168 Text | murderer; and thought that no great harm would be done even
169 Text | that I have always had a great interest in religious questions,
170 Text | acknowledge Euthyphro to be a great theologian, and sound in
171 Text | the court shall have a great deal more to say to him
172 Text | represented in the works of great artists? The temples are
173 Text | to the Acropolis at the great Panathenaea, is embroidered
The First Alcibiades
Part
174 Pre | excellence with length. A really great and original writer would
175 Pre | considerable length, of (3) great excellence, and also (4)
176 Pre | although in the case of really great works, e.g. the Phaedo,
177 Pre | may remark that one or two great writings, such as the Parmenides
178 Pre | fifty years, in an age of great intellectual activity, as
179 Pre | intended to rival that great work. If genuine, the proper
180 Pre | concluding words bear a great resemblance to the earlier
181 Intro| Spartan kings and with the great king of Persia; and he can
182 Intro| Laches and Protagoras, that great Athenian statesmen, like
183 Text | other man, for you have great possessions and lack nothing,
184 Text | you without my help; so great is the power which I believe
185 Text | you hope to prove your own great value to the state, and
186 Text | am able to prove my own great value to you, and to show
187 Text | Whether he be little or great, good or ill-looking, noble
188 Text | Many persons have done great wrong and profited by their
189 Text | Lacedaemonians and with the great king?~ALCIBIADES: True enough.~
190 Text | Spartan generals or the great king are really different
191 Text | Did you never observe how great is the property of the Spartan
192 Text | calling, they are held in great honour. And when the young
193 Text | the Spartan wealth, though great in comparison of the wealth
Gorgias
Part
194 Intro| Plato, as well as of other great artists. We may hardly admit
195 Intro| which is simplicity. Most great works receive a new light
196 Intro| certain cases pleasures as great as those of the good, or
197 Intro| must enlighten him upon the great subject of shams or flatteries.
198 Intro| rhetoricians, like despots, have great power. Socrates denies that
199 Intro| to them. Gorgias is the great rhetorician, now advanced
200 Intro| that rhetoric exercises great influence over other men,
201 Intro| that might is right. His great motive of action is political
202 Intro| human character is a man of great passions and great powers,
203 Intro| man of great passions and great powers, which he has developed
204 Intro| themselves carried away by the great tide of public opinion.
205 Intro| Protag.). Callicles exhibits great ability in defending himself
206 Intro| staying. There they find the great rhetorician and his younger
207 Intro| answered by him to his own great satisfaction, and with a
208 Intro| Socrates?), but he thinks that great want of manners is shown
209 Intro| studies brevity. Polus is in great indignation at not being
210 Intro| all. ‘Why, have they not great power, and can they not
211 Intro| cannot pronounce even the great king to be happy, unless
212 Intro| of Pericles, or any other great family— this is the kind
213 Intro| conventional level. But sometimes a great man will rise up and reassert
214 Intro| Cimon, Miltiades, and the great Pericles were still alive.
215 Intro| potentate, perhaps even the great king himself, appears before
216 Intro| is anything to prevent a great man from being a good one,
217 Intro| himself, and with other great teachers, and we may note
218 Intro| endeavour to draw out the great lessons which he teaches
219 Intro| Phaedo and Republic, a few great criminals, chiefly tyrants,
220 Intro| study of the tempers of the Great Beast, which he describes
221 Intro| crimes are committed on the great scale—the crimes of tyrants,
222 Intro| later to all, and is not so great an evil as an unworthy life,
223 Intro| loose from them, requires great force of mind; he hardly
224 Intro| take an interest in the great questions which surround
225 Intro| for the fulfilment of many great purposes. He knows, too,
226 Intro| statesman is well aware that a great purpose carried out consistently
227 Intro| for political life; his great ideas are not understood
228 Intro| seem to fall apart. The great art of novel writing, that
229 Intro| strongest. Instead of a great and nobly-executed subject,
230 Intro| monster (Republic): the great beast, i.e. the populace:
231 Intro| Inferno is reserved for great criminals only. The argument
232 Intro| Ardiaeus, are features of the great allegory which have an indescribable
233 Intro| the animals. There were no great estates, or families, or
234 Intro| a region between them. A great writer knows how to strike
235 Text | Gorgias, like myself, have had great experience of disputations,
236 Text | of being cured of a very great evil than of curing another.
237 Text | which a man can endure so great as an erroneous opinion
238 Text | argument may run on to a great length. And therefore I
239 Text | Socrates, and is not this a great comfort?—not to have learned
240 Text | Gorgias, there will be a great deal of discussion, before
241 Text | truth is, that there is great want of manners in bringing
242 Text | regarded? Have they not very great power in states?~SOCRATES:
243 Text | POLUS: And is not that a great power?~SOCRATES: Polus has
244 Text | assert.~SOCRATES: No, by the great—what do you call him?—not
245 Text | and would you call this great power?~POLUS: I should not.~
246 Text | rhetoricians or the tyrants have great power in states, unless
247 Text | suppose not.~SOCRATES: Then if great power is a good as you allow,
248 Text | allow, will such a one have great power in a state?~POLUS:
249 Text | in a state, and not have great power, and not do what he
250 Text | in an instant. Such is my great power in this city. And
251 Text | of way any one may have great power—he may burn any house
252 Text | doing as you think best is great power?~POLUS: Certainly
253 Text | more, my good sir, that great power is a benefit to a
254 Text | that this is the meaning of great power; and if not, then
255 Text | not even know whether the great king was a happy man?~SOCRATES:
256 Text | false witnesses who have a great air of respectability. And
257 Text | of Pericles, or any other great Athenian family whom you
258 Text | having had all sorts of great injuries inflicted on him,
259 Text | SOCRATES: And if the cutting be great or deep or such as will
260 Text | patient is delivered from a great evil; and this is the advantage
261 Text | happy, because he was a very great criminal and unpunished:
262 Text | this is true, where is the great use of rhetoric? If we admit
263 Text | for he will thereby suffer great evil?~POLUS: True.~SOCRATES:
264 Text | never aspire to anything great or noble. But if I see him
265 Text | Why, their modesty is so great that they are driven to
266 Text | imply when you said that great cities attack small ones
267 Text | stronger; and I will ask you, great Sir, to be a little milder
268 Text | only obtain them with a great deal of toil and difficulty;
269 Text | been initiated into the great mysteries before you were
270 Text | to ask how he may become great and formidable, this would
271 Text | say, the end of becoming a great man and not suffering injury?~
272 Text | and I have heard that a great many times from you and
273 Text | swimming; is that an art of any great pretensions?~CALLICLES:
274 Text | he asks in return for so great a boon; and he who is the
275 Text | man who is afflicted by great and incurable bodily diseases
276 Text | drowning, much less he who has great and incurable diseases,
277 Text | you the art of becoming great in the city, and yet not
278 Text | they have made the city great, not seeing that the swollen
279 Text | be accessories to them. A great piece of work is always
280 Text | observe that there is a great uproar and indignation at
281 Text | not appear to you to be a great inconsistency in saying
282 Text | either perfectly, or in a great measure and for a certain
283 Text | hands on the soul of the great king, or of some other king
284 Text | are, for where there is great power to do wrong, to live
285 Text | Lysimachus. But, in general, great men are also bad, my friend.~
286 Text | also to take part in the great combat, which is the combat
Ion
Part
287 Intro| nature of his own art; his great memory contrasts with his
288 Text | poets handle? Is not war his great argument? and does he not
289 Text | inspired?~ION: There is a great difference, Socrates, between
Laches
Part
290 Intro| happens with the sons of great men, has been neglected;
291 Intro| the Lacedaemonians, those great masters of arms, neglect
292 Text | have been upheld, and the great defeat would never have
293 Text | any case he would have a great advantage. Further, this
294 Text | science will make any man a great deal more valiant and self-possessed
295 Text | that crowd and making such great professions of his powers,
296 Text | That is true.~SOCRATES: Great care, then, is required
297 Text | things small as well as great? For example, if a man shows
298 Text | for a Sophist than for a great statesman whom the city
299 Text | my sweet friend, but a great statesman is likely to have
300 Text | statesman is likely to have a great intelligence. And I think
301 Text | Socrates, that there is a great deal of truth in what you
302 Text | to Socrates. I had very great hopes that you would have
Laws
Book
303 1 | that I can point out any great or obvious examples of similar
304 1 | commanded to eschew all great pleasures and amusements
305 1 | gymnasia and common meals do a great deal of good, and yet they
306 1 | be saved from doing some great evil.~Cleinias. It will
307 1 | followers, which is a very great advantage; and so of other
308 1 | want you to tell me what great good will be effected, supposing
309 1 | If you mean to ask what great good accrues to the state
310 1 | that the good is not very great in any particular instance.
311 1 | all the Hellenes to be a great talker, whereas Sparta is
312 1 | work of reformation is the great business of every man while
313 1 | matter, and to have taken a great many more words than were
314 1 | always deems to be a very great evil both to individuals
315 1 | there is no risk and no great danger than the reverse?”~
316 1 | any instance fell into any great unseemliness, but was always
317 2 | are not other advantages great and much to be desired.
318 2 | evil?~Cleinias. There is a great difference, Stranger, in
319 2 | things?~Cleinias. A very great improvement, if the customs
320 2 | and this whether he be great and strong or small and
321 2 | be immortal; but not so great, if the bad man lives only
322 2 | shall suffer a disgrace as great as he who disobeys military
323 3 | tradition.~Athenian. After the great destruction, may we not
324 3 | and arts and laws, and a great deal of vice and a great
325 3 | great deal of vice and a great deal of virtue?~Cleinias.
326 3 | the arts, and there was great difficulty in getting at
327 3 | the present, I would go a great way to hear such another,
328 3 | whole, without any very great infliction of pain.~Megillus.
329 3 | equalized property, escaped the great accusation which generally
330 3 | still existed and had a great prestige; the people of
331 3 | just as we now fear the Great King. And the second capture
332 3 | institutions, of which such great expectations were entertained,
333 3 | salvation or destruction of great and noble interests, than
334 3 | any one who sees anything great or powerful, immediately
335 3 | only knew how to use his great and noble possession, how
336 3 | happy would he be, and what great results would he achieve!”~
337 3 | admiration at the sight of great wealth or family honour,
338 3 | greatest, because affecting the great mass of the human soul;
339 3 | obey in cities, whether great or small; and similarly
340 3 | ruined themselves and the great and famous Hellenic power
341 3 | calamity? Truly there is no great wisdom in knowing, and no
342 3 | wisdom in knowing, and no great difficulty in telling, after
343 3 | That if any one gives too great a power to anything, too
344 3 | power vanishes from him. And great legislators who know the
345 3 | that there ought to be no great and unmixed powers; and
346 3 | imagine that Cyrus, though a great and patriotic general, had
347 3 | has never been a really great king among the Persians,
348 3 | although they are all called Great. And their degeneracy is
349 4 | not providing anything in great abundance. Had there been
350 4 | there might have been a great export trade, and a great
351 4 | great export trade, and a great return of gold and silver;
352 4 | but he, as we know, was a great naval potentate, who compelled
353 4 | Plataea the completion, of the great deliverance, and that these
354 4 | storm there must surely be a great advantage in having the
355 4 | is the contemporary of a great legislator, and that some
356 4 | cannot say that I have any great desire to see one.~Athenian.
357 4 | superior race, and they with great case and pleasure to themselves,
358 4 | many think that he is a great man, but in a short time
359 4 | having. For there is no great inclination or readiness
360 4 | he should remember how great will be the difference between
361 4 | that all laws, small and great alike, should have preambles
362 5 | to time, and the many and great evils which befell him in
363 5 | possible. For the possession of great wealth is of no use, either
364 5 | shall be proclaimed the great and perfect citizen, and
365 5 | truth. But he who would be a great man ought to regard, not
366 5 | in which there are many great and intense elements of
367 5 | manner those who are to hold great offices in states, should
368 5 | way we commonly dispose of great sinners who are incurable,
369 5 | property. For this is the great beginning of salvation to
370 5 | after all there be very great difficulty about the equal
371 5 | citizens, owing to the too great love of those who live together,
372 5 | the law and the God. How great is the benefit of such an
373 5 | is advising should be as great and as rich as possible,
374 5 | disgracefully, are only half as great as those which are expended
375 6 | and in my opinion is a great deal more than half the
376 6 | consider that of all the great offices of state, this is
377 6 | although I have never had any great acquaintance with the art.~
378 6 | improve the picture, all his great labour will last but a short
379 6 | or deed, or has any way great or small by which he can
380 6 | entire number had, and has, a great many convenient divisions,
381 6 | of property, but there is great difficulty in what relates
382 6 | the Messenians, and the great mischiefs which happen in
383 6 | public life, is making a great mistake. Why have I made
384 6 | the legislator, which is a great mistake. And, in consequence
385 6 | endeavour to master by the three great principles of fear and law
386 7 | Stranger, are we to impose this great amount of exercise upon
387 7 | and go for a walk of a great many miles for the sake
388 7 | which you and I differ is of great importance, and I hope that
389 7 | just ancestral customs of great antiquity, which, if they
390 7 | omitting nothing, whether great or small, of what are called
391 7 | consequence, but makes a great difference, and may be of
392 7 | difference, and may be of very great importance to the warrior
393 7 | armour. And there is a very great difference between one who
394 7 | plays of childhood have a great deal to do with the permanence
395 7 | Will you hear me tell how great I deem the evil to be?~Cleinias.
396 7 | ready to speak about such great matters, or be confident
397 7 | believe that he will be in great difficulty.~Cleinias. What
398 7 | indeed, that we have a great many poets writing in hexameter,
399 7 | be able to attend to such great charges?~Athenian. O my
400 7 | being an impossibility, great would be the disgrace to
401 7 | in a state, as well as a great misfortune.~Athenian. Suppose
402 7 | other stars. There would be great folly in supposing that
403 7 | bare knowledge only is no great distinction?~Cleinias. Certainly.~
404 7 | expression, about those great Gods, the Sun and the Moon.~
405 7 | meaning, but not a very great one, nor will any great
406 7 | great one, nor will any great length of time be required.
407 7 | matters of positive law is a great absurdity. Now, our laws
408 7 | the air, and there is a great deal of hunting of land
409 8 | difficult, but there is great difficulty, in acquiring
410 8 | we naturally do not take great pains about the rearing
411 8 | alteration of them do any great good or harm to the state.
412 8 | however, another matter of great importance and difficulty,
413 8 | way of escape out of so great a danger? Truly, Cleinias,
414 8 | and Lacedaemon furnish a great help to those who make peculiar
415 8 | general, who are born in great multitudes, and yet remain
416 8 | the discovery would do no great good, for at present they
417 8 | deeming it necessary that the great legislator of our state
418 9 | citizen be found guilty of any great or unmentionable wrong,
419 9 | father, grandfather, and great–grandfather have successively
420 9 | simply bound under some great necessity which cannot be
421 9 | are quite as many and as great as the voluntary? And please
422 9 | that such a hurt, whether great or small, is not an injury
423 9 | any injustice, small or great, the law will admonish and
424 9 | legislator to be the source of great and monstrous times, but
425 9 | about, of them, small or great, is next to impossible.~
426 9 | and at the same time cause great and notable disgrace to
427 10 | religion; and especially great when in violation of public
428 10 | and in the second degree great when they are committed
429 10 | will certainly extend to great length, if we are to treat
430 10 | you one point which is of great importance, and about which
431 10 | have you given, and how great is the injury which is thus
432 10 | heavy and light; and the great and primitive works and
433 10 | ingenuity.~Cleinias. It does us great credit.~Athenian. And the
434 10 | or dead; and yet there is great reason to believe that this
435 10 | small as well as about the great. For he was present and
436 10 | mind which takes care of great matters and no care of small
437 10 | to attend to these things great or small, which a God or
438 10 | these things are to the Gods great or small—in either case
439 10 | hearing the small than the great, but more facility in moving
440 10 | small and regarded only the great;—as the builders say, the
441 10 | works, small as well as great, by one and the same art;
442 10 | small beginnings had grown great, and you fancied that from
443 10 | together and contribute to the great whole. And thinkest thou,
444 10 | not guilty of any other great and impious crime—shall
445 11 | deposited, but perhaps a great heap of treasure, what he
446 11 | apply equally to matters great and small:—If a man happens
447 11 | their language they do a great deal of harm to themselves
448 11 | easy matter, and requires a great deal of virtue.~Cleinias.
449 11 | and when they might make a great deal of money are sober
450 11 | compelling but advising the great body of the citizens to
451 11 | language which causes a great deal of anxiety and trouble
452 11 | any one thinks that too great power is thus given to the
453 11 | penalty far heavier than a great loss of money.~Thus will
454 11 | be bad, or conversely, no great calamity is the result of
455 11 | passion, which is another great evil; and if he do not,
456 12 | many laws are required; the great principle of all is that
457 12 | his arms. For there is a great or rather absolute difference
458 12 | the half which have the great number of votes. And if
459 12 | oath clearly results in a great advantage to the taker of
460 12 | after death may have no great sins to be punished in the
461 12 | it is ridiculous, after a great deal of labour has been
462 12 | without discredit where great and glorious truths are
463 12 | that they are, and know how great is their power, as far as
Lysis
Part
464 Intro| of noble descent and of great beauty, goodness, and intelligence:
465 Intro| what is the secret of this great blessing.’~When one man
466 Intro| admit of this; but on the great occasions of life, when
467 Intro| While we do not deny that great good may result from such
468 Intro| hint reveal’ the secrets great or small which an unfortunate
469 Text | songs, that would show a great want of wit: do you not
470 Text | relation Menexenus is his great friend, shall call him.~
471 Text | indeed, Socrates; there are a great many things which they hinder
472 Text | would appear, out of their great possessions, which are under
473 Text | case, I said: There is the great king, and he has an eldest
474 Text | But I saw that he was in great excitement and confusion
475 Text | thus: Suppose the case of a great treasure (this may be a
Menexenus
Part
476 Pre | excellence with length. A really great and original writer would
477 Pre | considerable length, of (3) great excellence, and also (4)
478 Pre | although in the case of really great works, e.g. the Phaedo,
479 Pre | may remark that one or two great writings, such as the Parmenides
480 Pre | fifty years, in an age of great intellectual activity, as
481 Pre | intended to rival that great work. If genuine, the proper
482 Pre | concluding words bear a great resemblance to the earlier
483 Intro| political insight of the great historian. The fiction of
484 Intro| fault of the city was too great kindness to their enemies,
485 Intro| Aristophanic humour. How a great original genius like Plato
486 Text | should be able to speak is no great wonder, Menexenus, considering
487 Text | justice and religion. And a great proof that she brought forth
488 Text | there was a report that the great king was going to make a
489 Text | themselves. Whereas, to the great king she refused to give
Meno
Part
490 Intro| Socrates remarks, saves a great deal of trouble to him who
491 Intro| Athenian gentleman—to the great Athenian statesmen of past
492 Intro| Themistocles, Pericles, and other great men, had sons to whom they
493 Intro| hereditary friend of the great king. Like Alcibiades he
494 Intro| Protagoras to the other great Sophist. He is the sophisticated
495 Intro| to be a caricature of a great theory of knowledge, which
496 Intro| together in a new form. Their great diversity shows the tentative
497 Intro| ancient philosophy. There is a great deal in modern philosophy
498 Intro| philosophy is, it exercised a great influence on his successors,
499 Text | hereditary friend of the great king, virtue is the power
500 Text | kings and mighty men and great in wisdom and are called