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The Apology
Part
1 Intro| ground that all his life long he had been preparing against
2 Intro| evil. For either death is a long sleep, the best of sleeps,
3 Intro| he has been all his life long, ‘a king of men.’ He would
4 Intro| his sophistry all his life long. He is serious when he is
5 Intro| conceives of death as a long sleep (in this respect differing
6 Text | these accusations you heard long before the others, and much
7 Text | slander which has lasted a long time. May I succeed, if
8 Text | against his nature. After long consideration, I thought
9 Text | to the state, and all day long and in all places am always
10 Text | I should have perished long ago, and done no good either
Charmides
Part
11 PreS | dialogue.~At the end of a long task, the translator may
12 PreS | than in English. For it was long before the true use of the
13 PreS | ear or intelligence for a long and complicated sentence
14 PreS | modern, we must break up the long sentence into two or more
15 Text | taken place at Potidaea not long before we came away, of
16 Text | a distinction which has long been in your family, and
17 Text | at Critias.~Critias had long been showing uneasiness,
18 Text | their own work? Have we not long ago asseverated that wisdom
Cratylus
Part
19 Intro| Phaedrus. The jest is a long one, extending over more
20 Intro| Antisthenes, how does the long catalogue of etymologies
21 Intro| Euthyphro, who gave me a long lecture which began at dawn,
22 Intro| work his will with them so long as they are confused and
23 Intro| But it may have taken a long time to perfect the art
24 Intro| of writing, and another long period may have elapsed
25 Intro| intimation to a friend; a long or elaborate speech or composition
26 Text | defended their city and long walls’?~This appears to
27 Text | letter make any difference so long as the essence of the thing
28 Text | which we add to them; but so long as we introduce the meaning,
29 Text | Prospaltian deme, who gave me a long lecture which commenced
30 Text | original names have been long ago buried and disguised
31 Text | which is called by us emera (long e).~HERMOGENES: That is
32 Text | the reason is, that men long for (imeirousi) and love
33 Text | whether some Muse may have long been an inhabitant of your
34 Text | Excellent Cratylus, I have long been wondering at my own
35 Text | named, and described, so long as the general character
36 Text | consistently mistaken in the long deductions which follow.
Critias
Part
37 Text | weary traveller after a long journey, may be at rest!
38 Text | that had happened in times long past; for mythology and
39 Text | whole country is only a long promontory extending far
40 Text | sustenance to bees, not so very long ago there were still to
41 Text | generations of kings through long ages. It was for the most
42 Text | For many generations, as long as the divine nature lasted
Crito
Part
43 Intro| many: whereas, all his life long he has followed the dictates
44 Text | one another all our life long only to discover that we
Euthydemus
Part
45 Intro| mind of a child. It was long before the new world of
46 Intro| Alcibiades, who is described as long dead, (Greek), and who died
47 Text | whom I had not seen for a long time; and then I said to
48 Text | for having saved me from a long and tiresome investigation
49 Text | the art which we have so long been seeking might be discovered
Euthyphro
Part
50 Text | appearance; he has a beak, and long straight hair, and a beard
51 Text | will applaud your wisdom as long as I live.~EUTHYPHRO: It
The First Alcibiades
Part
52 Text | hardly like to confess, would long ago have passed away, as
53 Text | with you, and I have been long expecting his permission.
54 Text | know whether I can make a long speech, such as you are
55 Text | Certainly.~SOCRATES: And for as long a time as is better?~ALCIBIADES:
56 Text | and can you tell me how long it is since you thought
57 Text | I am saying; and I have long been, unconsciously to myself,
58 Text | the soul goes not away, as long as the soul follows after
Gorgias
Part
59 Intro| of Gorgias, of being ‘as long as he pleases,’ or ‘as short
60 Intro| brief; for ‘he can be as long as he pleases, and as short
61 Intro| remembers hearing him give long ago to his own clique of
62 Intro| Apology, ‘death be only a long sleep,’ we can hardly tell
63 Intro| them.’ For all our life long we are talking with ourselves:—
64 Intro| that human life, ‘if not long in comparison with eternity’ (
65 Intro| are combined, if he plays long enough he is certain of
66 Intro| from which all his life long a good man has been praying
67 Text | who has been talking a long time, is tired.~CHAEREPHON:
68 Text | came, I had already given a long exhibition, and if we proceed
69 Text | if, when you are making a long oration, and refusing to
70 Text | inconsistent in making a long speech, when I would not
71 Text | notion of happiness; but not long afterwards he threw him
72 Text | rate be allowed to live as long as he can. For such purposes,
73 Text | their original flesh in the long run, and become thinner
74 Text | speeches which I am making are long enough because you refuse
Ion
Part
75 Intro| the contrary. But Ion has long been playing tricks with
76 Text | another so as to form quite a long chain: and all of them derive
Laches
Part
77 Text | ought to have visited us long ago, and made yourself at
78 Text | singularity of the man. To make a long story short, I will only
79 Text | desire to be learning so long as he lives, and will not
Laws
Book
80 1 | appearing to elicit a very long discourse out of very small
81 2 | wonder when I tell you: Long ago they appear to have
82 2 | discourses all their life long. But if you do not agree
83 3 | by little, during a very long period of time.~Cleinias.
84 3 | There must have been a long interval, clearly.~Athenian.
85 3 | would think that a day as long as this—and we are now approaching
86 4 | without trouble and in no very long period of time, the tyrant,
87 4 | the primeval world, and a long while before the cities
88 4 | their need. And all his life long he ought never to utter,
89 4 | the sweat of labour, and long and steep is the way thither,
90 5 | he may live a true man as long as possible, for then he
91 5 | If there are quarrels of long standing among them, no
92 5 | will endure all their life long to have their property fixed
93 6 | too; and they are both a long way off. But you and likewise
94 6 | down a condemned man as long as he lives, in some place
95 6 | years of age, if he live so long.~These are the three first
96 6 | live in them; bidding a long farewell to other institutions
97 6 | whole year and all his life long, and especially while he
98 7 | remained unchanged during long ages, so that no one has
99 7 | shall be liable all his life long to have a suit of impiety
100 7 | live the life of peace as long and as well as he can. And
101 7 | present circumstances, nor as long as women and children and
102 7 | soul. Night and day are not long enough for the accomplishment
103 7 | and reason keeps awake as long he can, reserving only so
104 7 | select choice passages and long speeches, and make compendiums
105 7 | did not know these things long ago, nor in the days of
106 7 | about men who ran in the long course, and that we addressed
107 8 | Cleinias. The insatiable life long love of wealth, as you were
108 8 | fourthly, he who is to run the long course; the fifth whom we
109 8 | the horse–course and the long course, and let them run
110 9 | penalty, let him undergo a long and public imprisonment
111 10 | do when this evil is of long standing? should he only
112 11 | which can only be reached be long journeys, for the sake of
113 11 | many tales and traditions, long indeed, but true; and seeing
114 12 | according to the ancient law, as long as their lives answer to
115 12 | be a measure of time as long as the city lasts; and after
116 12 | blessedness in song all day long; and at dawn a hundred of
117 12 | only be given rightly in a long discourse.~Cleinias. What
Lysis
Part
118 Text | like?—keeping you all day long in subjection to another,
119 Text | new, and let me hear, as long as I am allowed to stay.~
120 Text | theory have been only a long story about nothing?~Likely
Menexenus
Part
121 Text | him by a wise man who has long ago prepared what he has
122 Text | am speaking happened not long ago and we can all of us
Meno
Part
123 Intro| for which he has contended long ago in the Protagoras, that
124 Text | fancies that he knows how long a line is necessary in order
125 Text | who has right opinion, so long as he has right opinion?~
126 Text | soul, and do not remain long, and therefore they are
Parmenides
Part
127 Intro| the assertion without a long and laborious demonstration,
128 Intro| language of the Philebus, have long agreed to treat as obsolete;
129 Intro| cannot be explained without a long and laborious demonstration: ‘
130 Intro| to be no residuum of this long piece of dialectics. But
131 Intro| Words are used through long chains of argument, sometimes
132 Intro| introduction to the Sophist. Long ago, in the Euthydemus,
133 Intro| fitted into every other, and long trains of argument are carried
134 Intro| confusions? We see again that a long period in the history of
135 Text | Clazomenae, but that was a long time ago; his father’s name,
136 Text | and is willing to follow a long and laborious demonstration;
137 Text | which I have not heard for a long time.~When Zeno had thus
138 Text | But if it is at all and so long as it is, it must be one,
Phaedo
Part
139 Intro| practising death all her life long, and she is now finally
140 Intro| praises of Apollo all his life long, sings at his death more
141 Intro| ideas of right, they would long ago have taken themselves
142 Intro| doctrine of ideas, which has long ago received the assent
143 Intro| to his own generation:—so long as his friends or his disciples
144 Intro| disciples are alive, so long as his books continue to
145 Intro| continue to be read, so long as his political or military
146 Intro| almost in a moment. The long experience of life will
147 Intro| probability of death being a long sleep is not excluded. The
148 Text | Athens now, and it is a long time since any stranger
149 Text | death, not at the time, but long afterwards. What was the
150 Text | was not put to death until long after he was condemned.~
151 Text | what Crito wants; he has long been wishing to say something
152 Text | desire of death all his life long, why when his time comes
153 Text | they intimated in a figure long ago that he who passes unsanctified
154 Text | always continue to know as long as life lasts—for knowing
155 Text | And were we not saying long ago that the soul when using
156 Text | some time, nay even for a long time, if the constitution
157 Text | having sung all their life long, do then sing more lustily
158 Text | mine would have gone off long ago to Megara or Boeotia—
159 Text | was relating before, has long been fluttering about the
160 Text | earth, some of them making a long circuit into many lands,
Phaedrus
Part
161 Intro| teach how to be short or long at pleasure. Prodicus showed
162 Intro| than either to be short or long, which was to be of convenient
163 Intro| how, after a time at no long intervals, first one and
164 Intro| were Euhemerists in Hellas long before Euhemerus. Early
165 Intro| this, like several other long periods in the history of
166 Text | benefactor. For my part, I do so long to hear his speech, that
167 Text | rhetorician of the age spent a long time in composing. Indeed,
168 Text | unless it was unusually long, and he went to a place
169 Text | they think that they have long ago made to the beloved
170 Text | embrace him, and probably not long afterwards his desire is
171 Text | put another as fine and as long as yours into the field,
172 Text | pleasure turns out to be a long and tedious affair.) of
173 Text | the proverb is really the long arm of the Nile. And you
174 Text | elbow of theirs is also a long arm. For there is nothing
175 Text | admirers in what is often a long and tedious composition.
176 Text | on the tomb of Midas; So long as water flows and tall
177 Text | and tall trees grow, So long here on this spot by his
178 Text | which was to be neither long nor short, but of a convenient
179 Text | knows how to make a very long speech about a small matter,
180 Text | there is no use in taking a long rough roundabout way if
181 Text | therefore if the way is long and circuitous, marvel not
182 Text | of them. It would take a long time to repeat all that
183 Text | compositions, which he has been long patching and piecing, adding
Philebus
Part
184 Intro| illustrations; such difficulties had long been solved by common sense (‘
185 Intro| like wonders. Socrates has long ceased to see any wonder
186 Intro| is yearning all his life long for a truth which will hereafter
187 Intro| standards of morals. For long ago they have been classified
188 Intro| applications of them, would be a long enquiry too far removed
189 Intro| Mill, whose lives were a long devotion to the service
190 Intro| other hand, we have to go a long way round. No man is indignant
191 Intro| with Aristotle, he is now a long way from himself and from
192 Text | Protarchus and I have been long asking.~SOCRATES: Assuredly
193 Text | you say, you have been so long asking?~PHILEBUS: How so?~
194 Text | I remember to have heard long ago certain discussions
195 Text | Protarchus, to live all your life long in the enjoyment of the
196 Text | pleasure belongs has also been long ago discovered?~PROTARCHUS:
197 Text | intensity; as was indeed said long ago by us.~PROTARCHUS: Quite
198 Text | now let us bid farewell, a long farewell, to you or me or
Protagoras
Part
199 Intro| that is to say, he makes a long speech not much to the point,
200 Intro| that he cannot follow a long speech, and therefore he
201 Intro| admits his inability to speak long; will Protagoras in like
202 Intro| the way; he also makes a long speech in defence of the
203 Intro| allusion to Protagoras’ long speeches. (3) The manifest
204 Text | images of them. He was not long in inventing articulate
205 Text | and you would sorrowfully long to revisit the rascality
206 Text | they go ringing on in a long harangue, like brazen pots,
207 Text | and when any one makes a long speech to me I never remember
208 Text | but I cannot manage these long speeches: I only wish that
209 Text | or with some one of the long or day course runners. To
210 Text | Protagoras, to the effect that as long as Protagoras is willing
211 Text | your wish; for I too ought long since to have kept the engagement
The Republic
Book
212 1 | whom I had not seen for a long time, and I thought him
213 1 | through with the argument so long as I have reason to think
214 2 | and laboring four times as long and as much as he need in
215 2 | continue working all his life long and at no other; he was
216 2 | given up, even if somewhat long. ~Certainly not. ~Come then,
217 2 | progeny whose days were to be long, and to know no sickness.
218 3 | purging the State, which not long ago we termed luxurious. ~
219 3 | rise and fall of the foot, long and short alternating; and,
220 3 | assigned to them short and long quantities. Also in some
221 3 | his education has made him long familiar. ~Yes, he said,
222 3 | soul, but from late and long observation of the nature
223 4 | say that in reality for a long time past we have been talking
224 5 | community you mean. We have been long expecting that you would
225 5 | life to be serious. Not long ago, as we shall remind
226 5 | like kind, which I foresaw long ago; they made me afraid
227 5 | shall not be protracted too long; and the mothers will have
228 5 | boys look on and help, long before they touch the wheel? ~
229 5 | battle, was rewarded with long chines, which seems to be
230 6 | the discussion would be long and difficult; and what
231 7 | behold the waking reality so long as they leave the hypotheses
232 7 | intellect, for it will be a long inquiry, many times longer
233 7 | firm or flinch. ~And how long is this stage of their lives
234 8 | in long-lived ones over a long space. But to the knowledge
235 9 | soul of him: all his life long he is beset with fear and
236 10 | the imitator, I said, is a long way off the truth, and can
237 10 | drawling out his sorrows in a long oration, or weeping, and
238 10 | best and truest; but so long as she is unable to make
239 10 | seemed to have come from a long journey, and they went forth
240 10 | Glaucon, would take too long to tell; but the sum was
The Second Alcibiades
Part
241 Text | crazy people? Should we not long since have paid the penalty
242 Text | tell of many who, having long desired and diligently laboured
243 Text | to go to war or for how long?~ALCIBIADES: No.~SOCRATES:
244 Text | men.~ALCIBIADES: And how long must I wait, Socrates, and
245 Text | approaching: nor will it be long hence, if they so will.~
The Seventh Letter
Part
246 Text | abuses of the time.~Not long after that a revolution
247 Text | though perhaps it is rather long to repeat, was as follows: “
248 Text | On my arrival, to cut a long story short, I found the
249 Text | and, as far as possible, a long line of ancestors of good
250 Text | philosophy. He also sent a very long letter, knowing as he did
251 Text | learnt, by complete and long continued study, as I said
252 Text | income from it. But not long after the foregoing events,
253 Text | Dionysios thought that his long cherished scheme not to
254 Text | benefit one another; so long as you aim at injuring one
The Sophist
Part
255 Intro| with Socrates by making long orations. In this character
256 Intro| perplexity thus created, so long as the mind, lost in the
257 Intro| neither do I think that he can long escape me, for every way
258 Intro| sits,’ which is not very long, ‘Theaetetus’ is the subject,
259 Intro| may be either a maker of long speeches, or of shorter
260 Intro| only as the result of a long and tedious enquiry; by
261 Text | are accustomed to make a long oration on a subject which
262 Text | talk, to be spinning out a long soliloquy or address, as
263 Text | will certainly be a very long one, a great deal longer
264 Text | defined; and the world has long ago agreed, that if great
265 Text | are they?~STRANGER: When long speeches are answered by
266 Text | speeches are answered by long speeches, and there is public
267 Text | I should have to think a long while.~STRANGER: In all
268 Text | to that enquiry we have long said good-bye—it may or
269 Text | convince us of error, or, so long as he cannot, he too must
270 Text | Theaetetus sits’—not a very long sentence.~THEAETETUS: Not
271 Text | multitude in public in a long speech, and the dissembler,
The Statesman
Part
272 Intro| remarkable expressions, ‘the long and difficult language of
273 Intro| they ought to have perished long ago, if they had depended
274 Intro| human things. Mankind have long been in despair of finding
275 Intro| short-lived, but that they last so long in spite of the badness
276 Text | are transferred into the long and difficult language (
277 Text | woof, instead of making a long and useless circuit?~YOUNG
278 Text | they were felt to be too long, and I reproached myself
279 Text | physician all the same, so long as he exercises authority
280 Text | and is expecting to be a long time away from his patients—
281 Text | laws, which are based upon long experience, and the wisdom
The Symposium
Part
282 Intro| sleeps during the whole of a long winter’s night. When he
283 Text | Then it must have been a long while ago, he said; and
284 Text | fit, as usual, was not of long duration —Socrates entered.
285 Text | Socrates, said Agathon, and ere long you and I will have to determine
286 Text | compounded of elements short and long, once differing and now
287 Text | that which he had conceived long before, and in company with
288 Text | fails, and it will be a long time before you get old.’
289 Text | mistaken, will be tested before long. His fortitude in enduring
290 Text | s praises, for all this long story is only an ingenious
291 Text | and as the nights were long took a good rest: he was
Theaetetus
Part
292 Intro| were only appended after a long interval of time. The allusion
293 Intro| knowledge is not new to him; long ago he has felt the ‘pang
294 Intro| clearly, when they have been long fixed and defined. In the
295 Intro| conversation with him, not long before his own death; and
296 Intro| to Athens’...Terpsion had long intended to ask for a sight
297 Intro| suit them. I tell you this long story because I suspect
298 Intro| like ourselves, he may be long or short, as he pleases.
299 Intro| remembered and known by him as long as the impression lasts;
300 Intro| river, etc. which are a long way off are objects of a
301 Intro| are learning all our life long, and which we attain in
302 Intro| is the use of them, how long they will last? They may
303 Intro| and forgotten, and after a long interval the thing which
304 Intro| revisiting a spot after a long interval: How many things
305 Intro| indivisible instant. The long train of association by
306 Text | inspired sages. I tell you this long story, friend Theaetetus,
307 Text | idleness, but preserved for a long time by motion and exercise?~
308 Text | thereby indicating that so long as the sun and the heavens
309 Text | to be just and fair, so long as it is regarded as such,
310 Text | great many men who have long beards?~SOCRATES: Yes, Theodorus,
311 Text | of the agreement, and as long as the agreement lasts;
312 Text | releasing me from a very long discussion, if you are clear
313 Text | gained, by education and long experience.~THEAETETUS:
314 Text | know what is imprinted as long as the image lasts; but
315 Text | else which he knows; nor so long as these agree, can he think
316 Text | Theaetetus, that we have long been infected with logical
317 Text | saying to one another, so long as we remain ignorant about
318 Text | learned and known something long ago, he may resume and get
319 Text | the knowledge which he has long possessed, but has not at
320 Text | And thus, after going a long way round, we are once more
Timaeus
Part
321 Intro| thunderbolt. For there occurs at long intervals a derangement
322 Intro| remaining part he divided into long and round figures, and to
323 Intro| would have lived twice as long. But our creators were of
324 Intro| decompose blackens from long burning, and from being
325 Intro| deformities. A leg or an arm too long or too short is at once
326 Intro| have slowly accumulated in long periods of time (Hdt.).
327 Intro| Arist. Metaph.). Having long meditated on the properties
328 Intro| one body upon another in long periods of time have become
329 Text | earth, which recurs after long intervals; at such times
330 Text | speak at the moment. For a long time had elapsed, and I
331 Text | which I have heard very long ago. I listened at the time
332 Text | interpolate in our present long discourse a digression equally
333 Text | discourse a digression equally long, but if it is possible to
334 Text | reason of this would be long to tell; he who disproves
335 Text | in the same state. But so long as in the process of transition
336 Text | life twice or many times as long as it now has, and also
337 Text | never at any time ceasing so long as the mortal being holds
338 Text | hard to decompose, from long burning grows black, and
339 Text | body which has a leg too long, or which is unsymmetrical
340 Text | when remaining unfruitful long beyond its proper time,