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| Alphabetical [« »] yours 84 yourself 177 yourselves 35 youth 339 youthful 24 youthfulness 2 youths 31 | Frequency [« »] 343 subject 340 likely 340 long 339 youth 338 makes 338 work 337 knows | Plato Partial collection IntraText - Concordances youth |
The Apology
Part
1 Intro| that he was a corrupter of youth, and had seen him caricatured
2 Intro| evil-doer and corrupter of the youth, who does not receive the
3 Intro| villainous corrupter of youth, and by repeating the commonplaces
4 Intro| supposed to corrupt the youth?’ ‘Yes, it is.’ ‘Has he
5 Intro| his way of corrupting the youth, which he will not cease
6 Intro| world the improvers of the youth; or, when he argues that
7 Intro| if he has corrupted the youth, he must have corrupted
8 Intro| guilty of corrupting the youth their relations would surely
9 Intro| with other ‘improvers of youth,’ answering the Sophist
10 Text | or it may have been in youth—and the cause when heard
11 Text | villainous misleader of youth!— and then if somebody asks
12 Text | of evil, who corrupts the youth; and who does not believe
13 Text | of evil, and corrupt the youth; but I say, O men of Athens,
14 Text | about the improvement of youth?~Yes, I do.~Tell the judges,
15 Text | to instruct and improve youth?~Certainly they are.~What,
16 Text | would be the condition of youth if they had one corrupter
17 Text | corrupting and deteriorating the youth, do you allege that I corrupt
18 Text | lessons by which I corrupt the youth, as you say.~Yes, that I
19 Text | them. And so, forsooth, the youth are said to be taught them
20 Text | doctrine which corrupts the youth, I am a mischievous person.
21 Text | have been corrupting the youth, those of them who are now
22 Text | advice in the days of their youth should come forward as accusers,
23 Text | call me; not the corrupted youth only—there might have been
Charmides
Part
24 Intro| Aristotle.~The beautiful youth, Charmides, who is also
25 Intro| Dialogue chiefly centres in the youth Charmides, with whom Socrates
26 Intro| thoughts of an intelligent youth; the third, which is a real
27 Text | philosophy, and about the youth. I asked whether any of
28 Text | when, in speaking of a fair youth, he warns some one ‘not
29 Text | thing. And the cure, my dear youth, has to be effected by the
30 Text | for modesty is becoming in youth; he then said very ingenuously,
31 Text | this, and, like a brave youth, tell me—What is temperance?~
Cratylus
Part
32 Intro| Heracleitus’ in the days of his youth? Socrates, touching on some
33 Intro| koros, not in the sense of a youth, but quasi to katharon kai
34 Intro| itself implies increase of youth, which is swift and sudden
35 Text | not in the sense of a youth, but signifying to chatharon
36 Text | to figure the growth of youth, which is swift and sudden
Euthydemus
Part
37 Intro| virtue, is interested in the youth Cleinias, the grandson of
38 Intro| Socrates, the two brothers, the youth Cleinias, who is watched
39 Intro| Socrates is afraid that the youth Cleinias may be discouraged
40 Intro| The ingenuousness of the youth delights Socrates, who is
41 Intro| tone, which encourages the youth, instead of ‘knocking him
42 Intro| for while Socrates and the youth are agreed that philosophy
43 Intro| money-getting habits. There is the youth Cleinias, the grandson of
44 Intro| ingenuous declaration of the youth Cleinias; and (4) not yet
45 Text | the Paeanian, a well-bred youth, but also having the wildness
46 Text | also having the wildness of youth. Cleinias saw me from the
47 Text | came and sat down by the youth, and the other by me on
48 Text | first; and there is the youth Cleinias, and Ctesippus:
49 Text | only try to persuade the youth whom you see here that he
50 Text | wise or the ignorant?~The youth, overpowered by the question
51 Text | when you were learning?~The youth nodded assent.~Then the
52 Text | cheered. Then, before the youth had time to recover his
53 Text | determined to persevere with the youth; and in order to heighten
54 Text | had another throw at the youth. Cleinias, he said, Euthydemus
55 Text | was proceeding to give the youth a third fall; but I knew
56 Text | that.~The simple-minded youth was amazed; and, observing
57 Text | and proceed to show the youth whether he should have all
58 Text | them to converse with the youth, and that this made them
59 Text | phraseology, destroy the youth and make him wise, and all
60 Text | strangers to save me and the youth from the whirlpool of the
61 Text | know how I can advise the youth to study philosophy.~SOCRATES:
Euthyphro
Part
62 Text | He says he knows how the youth are corrupted and who are
63 Text | cultivation of virtue in youth; like a good husbandman,
The First Alcibiades
Part
64 Pre | may have been written in youth, or possibly like the works
65 Intro| the aspiring and ambitious youth.~Alcibiades, who is described
66 Text | On what, then, does the youth rely?’ And if we replied:
67 Text | away when the flower of youth fades?~ALCIBIADES: True.~
Gorgias
Part
68 Intro| nothing.~Polus is an impetuous youth, a runaway ‘colt,’ as Socrates
69 Intro| would be an incongruity in a youth maintaining the cause of
70 Intro| Philosophy is graceful in youth, like the lisp of infancy,
71 Intro| poetry is the remembrance of youth, of love, the embodiment
72 Intro| reversed and were restored to youth and beauty: the dead came
73 Intro| the middle-aged young; the youth became a child, the child
74 Text | and strongest from their youth upwards, and tame them like
75 Text | philosophy; when I see a youth thus engaged,—the study
76 Text | in maturer years and in youth? For be assured that if
77 Text | accustom himself, from his youth upward, to feel sorrow and
Laches
Part
78 Text | spoiled in the days of our youth, while they were occupied
79 Text | time in places where the youth have any noble study or
80 Text | which the end is the soul of youth?~NICIAS: Yes.~SOCRATES:
81 Text | trainers of the minds of youth and also to have been really
82 Text | always from my earliest youth desired to have one. But
83 Text | of one, and then for the youth, regardless of expense or
Laws
Book
84 1 | charge of his citizens, in youth and age, and at every time
85 1 | citizens are from their youth upward unacquainted with
86 1 | and Boeotian, and Thurian youth, among whom these institutions
87 1 | right training of a single youth, or of a single chorus—when
88 1 | that from their earliest youth all boys, when they are
89 1 | practise that thing from his youth upwards, both in sport and
90 1 | education in virtue from youth upwards, which makes a man
91 2 | in us the memory of our youth.~Cleinias. Very true.~Athenian.
92 2 | constraining and directing of youth towards that right reason,
93 2 | they must train up your youth. Am I not right? For I plainly
94 2 | him to be gracious to the youth and to turn their hearts.
95 2 | against the excitableness of youth;—afterwards they may taste
96 2 | in age we may renew our youth, and forget our sorrows;
97 2 | them in the days of their youth, viz., the good legislator;
98 3 | into an evil plight. Their youth revolted; and when the soldiers
99 3 | at every time of life, in youth, in manhood, in age, he
100 3 | dotage of age or the heat of youth, having no sense of right
101 3 | Athenian. I think that from his youth upwards he was a soldier,
102 5 | state. The condition of youth which is free from flattery,
103 5 | not, while still in his youth, desert for another, he
104 6 | proof of what they are, from youth upward until the time of
105 6 | twelve others out of the youth of their own tribe—these
106 6 | Everywhere in such places the youth shall make gymnasia for
107 6 | honourable men in the days of his youth. Furthermore, during the
108 6 | minister of the education of youth, male and female; he too
109 7 | that every soul which from youth upward has been familiar
110 7 | of overcoming, from our youth upwards, the fears and terrors
111 7 | makes the disposition of youth discontented and irascible
112 7 | possible way to prevent our youth from even desiring to imitate
113 7 | general fashion among the youth, any more than he would
114 7 | the time has arrived for youth to go to their schoolmasters.
115 7 | mankind declare that the youth who are rightly educated
116 7 | learning is dangerous to youth.~Cleinias. How would you
117 7 | instruction and education of youth. And here and on this wise
118 7 | songs, charming the souls of youth, and inviting them to follow
119 7 | business, the superintendent of youth [i.e., the director of education];
120 7 | are the studies which our youth ought to learn, for they
121 7 | shall be proposed for our youth.~Cleinias. Proceed.~Athenian.
122 7 | that our citizens and our youth ought to learn about the
123 7 | ago, nor in the days of my youth, and yet I can explain them
124 7 | wonderful and fitting for youth to learn, but of which we
125 7 | exercise and pursuits of youth. And, on the other hand,
126 7 | come into the head of any youth. There remains therefore
127 8 | rest with the instructor of youth and the other guardians
128 8 | the whole education of our youth imposes a law of moderation
129 8 | him to enjoy the beauty of youth, and the other forbidding
130 8 | which desires the beloved youth to be the best possible;
131 8 | I can imagine some lusty youth who is standing by, and
132 8 | connection with a woman or a youth during the whole time of
133 8 | noblest of all, as from their youth upwards we will tell them,
134 9 | education and training from youth upward, he has not abstained
135 9 | violence to a free woman or a youth, shall be slain with impunity
136 10 | excesses and insolences of youth, and are offences against
137 10 | one who had taken up in youth this opinion, that the Gods
138 10 | a way into the minds of youth. They are told by them that
139 10 | Athenian. Let us say to the youth:—The ruler of the universe
140 10 | who inhabit Olympus.~ O youth or young man, who fancy
141 11 | the lightheartedness of youth or the like, shall pay a
142 12 | ought in time of peace from youth upwards to practise this
143 12 | pretends to be an instructor of youth, show himself to be better
Lysis
Part
144 Intro| Charmides, is an Athenian youth of noble descent and of
145 Intro| for the part which a mere youth takes in a difficult argument.
146 Intro| self-control, which, in youth especially, are rarely to
147 Intro| should these friends in youth or friends of the past regard
148 Text | his love, either to the youth himself, or to others.~Nay,
149 Text | the other ancestors of the youth, and their stud of horses,
150 Text | the other.~Yes, my dear youth, I said, the reason is not
Menexenus
Part
151 Pre | may have been written in youth, or possibly like the works
152 Text | I continue the games of youth in old age.~MENEXENUS: Far
Meno
Part
153 Intro| He is the sophisticated youth on whom Socrates tries his
154 Intro| may draw out the mind of youth; this was in contrast to
155 Intro| of Aristippus ‘and a fair youth having lovers,’ has no other
156 Text | deceived and corrupted the youth, are they to be supposed
157 Text | guardians who entrusted their youth to the care of these men
Parmenides
Part
158 Intro| easier; in the days of his youth he made a careful study
159 Intro| Parmenides in the days of his youth, about forty, and very good-looking:—
160 Intro| which he attributes to his youth. As he grows older, philosophy
161 Intro| practise in the days of his youth (compare Soph.).~The discussion
162 Text | he replied; when he was a youth he made a careful study
163 Text | upon; in the days of his youth he was reported to have
164 Text | the book in the days of my youth, but some one stole the
165 Text | always growing on the side of youth and the other on the side
Phaedo
Part
166 Text | mind’s eye an image of the youth to whom the lyre belongs?
Phaedrus
Part
167 Intro| disagreeable; ‘crabbed age and youth cannot live together.’ At
168 Intro| have been written in the youth of Isocrates, when the promise
169 Intro| necessarily have been written in youth. As little weight can be
170 Intro| have been the work of a youth of twenty or twenty-three
171 Intro| to us in the days of our youth. By mysticism we mean, not
172 Intro| which can restore life and youth to the literature of a nation,
173 Intro| present. When more of our youth are trained in the best
174 Text | been writing about a fair youth who was being tempted, but
175 Text | have loved the person of a youth before they knew his character
176 Text | enjoy the bloom of your youth, but to those who will share
177 Text | those who, when the charm of youth has left you, will show
178 Text | more properly speaking, a youth; he was very fair and had
179 Text | one, who had persuaded the youth that he did not love him,
180 Text | will go on talking to my youth. Listen:—~Thus, my friend,
181 Text | men. Consider this, fair youth, and know that in the friendship
182 Text | SOCRATES: But where is the fair youth whom I was addressing before,
183 Text | SOCRATES: Know then, fair youth, that the former discourse
184 Text | state, my dear imaginary youth to whom I am talking, is
185 Text | will confer upon you, my youth. Whereas the attachment
186 Text | His address to the fair youth begins where the lover would
Philebus
Part
187 Intro| The instincts of ingenuous youth are easily induced to take
188 Intro| Cynics and Eristics; the youth of Athens may discourse
189 Intro| to have cultivated in his youth, he speaks in the Philebus,
190 Intro| Callias, a noble Athenian youth, sprung from a family which
191 Intro| indignation felt by the generous youth at the ‘blasphemy’ of those
Protagoras
Part
192 Intro| fact, that the education of youth in virtue begins almost
193 Intro| thinks proper to warn the youth against the dangers of ‘
194 Text | Homer’s opinion, who says~‘Youth is most charming when the
195 Text | and with Pausanias was a youth quite young, who is certainly
196 Text | Pausanias. There was this youth, and also there were the
197 Text | persuading the flower of the youth in them to leave company
The Republic
Book
198 1 | There he is, said the youth, coming after you, if you
199 1 | drink; the pleasures of youth and love are fled away;
200 1 | an opposite disposition youth and age are equally a burden. ~
201 2 | best of life? Probably the youth will say to himself in the
202 2 | persuade us of this from our youth upward, we should not have
203 2 | must. ~Is not the noble youth very like a well-bred dog
204 3 | our disciples from their youth upward, if we mean them
205 3 | fate, leaving manhood and youth." ~Again: ~"And the soul,
206 3 | my sweet Adeimantus, our youth seriously listen to such
207 3 | In the next place our youth must be temperate? ~Certainly. ~
208 3 | them trying to persuade our youth that the gods are the authors
209 3 | they should imitate from youth upward only those characters
210 3 | imitations, beginning in early youth and continuing far into
211 3 | he replied. ~And if our youth are to do their work in
212 3 | graceful; then will our youth dwell in a land of health,
213 3 | now in the days of his youth, even before he is able
214 3 | you in thinking that our youth should be trained in music
215 3 | gymnastics, in which our youth are next to be trained. ~
216 3 | are those who, from their youth upward, have combined with
217 3 | associated with them from youth upward, and to have gone
218 3 | this is the reason why in youth good men often appear to
219 3 | the State. ~And thus our youth, having been educated only
220 3 | must watch them from their youth upward, and make them perform
221 3 | nature, so must we take our youth amid terrors of some kind,
222 3 | at every age, as boy and youth and in mature life, has
223 3 | are to be told that their youth was a dream, and the education
224 4 | Then, as I was saying, our youth should be trained from the
225 5 | that our braver and better youth, besides their other honors
226 5 | war in the days of their youth is a very important matter,
227 5 | horses in their earliest youth, and when they have learnt
228 5 | army, whether his love be youth or maiden, he may be more
229 5 | who are in the flower of youth do somehow or other raise
230 5 | appearing on the cheek of youth? In a word, there is no
231 5 | blooms in the spring-time of youth. ~If you make me an authority
232 5 | learning, especially in youth, when he has no power of
233 6 | then must from his earliest youth, as far as in him lies,
234 6 | which distinguish even in youth the philosophical nature
235 6 | on the study, not only in youth as a part of education,
236 6 | people so often say, that our youth are corrupted by Sophists,
237 6 | noble, and a tall, proper youth? Will he not be full of
238 6 | opposite. In childhood and youth their study, and what philosophy
239 7 | natures in the days of their youth; and they had been severed
240 7 | branch of knowledge which our youth will study? ~Let us do so,
241 7 | much than he can run much; youth is the time for any extraordinary
242 7 | important tests to which our youth are subjected. ~Certainly,
243 8 | said, is the timocratical youth, and he is like the timocratical
244 8 | prosecute them, they tell the youth that when he grows up he
245 8 | conversion of the ambitious youth into the avaricious one. ~
246 8 | said, is the oligarchical youth? ~Yes, he said; at any rate
247 8 | extravagance of the spendthrift youth because they gain by their
248 8 | he takes pains from his youth upward-of which the presence,
249 8 | controlled and trained in youth, and is hurtful to the body,
250 9 | He was supposed from his youth upward to have been trained
251 9 | some newly found blooming youth who is the reverse of indispensable? ~
252 9 | habituates him in the days of his youth to be trampled in the mire,
253 10 | always from my earliest youth had an awe and love of Homer,
254 10 | blooming; and now the bloom of youth has passed away from them? ~
255 10 | though they escape in their youth, are found out at last and
The Seventh Letter
Part
256 Text | suitable opportunity.~In my youth I went through the same
257 Text | position in it, and the youth of Dionysios and how strongly
The Sophist
Part
258 Intro| the rich meadow-lands of youth and wealth; or, again, the
259 Intro| individuals can corrupt youth to a degree worth speaking
260 Intro| were not the corrupters of youth (for the Athenian youth
261 Intro| youth (for the Athenian youth were no more corrupted in
262 Intro| they excited the minds of youth, are quite sufficient reasons
263 Intro| corrupters of the Athenian youth has no real foundation,
264 Intro| described as the corruption of youth, the Sophists were one among
265 Intro| of Pericles. The Athenian youth were not corrupted in this
266 Intro| peculiar Greek sympathy with youth, which he ascribes to Parmenides,
267 Intro| meadow-lands, in which generous youth abide. On land you may hunt
268 Intro| Theaetetus, have the might of youth, and I conjure you to exert
269 Intro| Lightly in the days of our youth, Parmenides and others told
270 Intro| experience. The enthusiasm of his youth has passed away, the authority
271 Text | meadow-lands of generous youth; and he also is intending
272 Text | hunter after wealth and youth.~THEAETETUS: Yes.~STRANGER:
273 Text | STRANGER: But oh! my dear youth, do you suppose this possible?
274 Text | noble effort, as becomes youth, and endeavour with all
275 Text | dare say that, owing to my youth, I may often waver in my
The Statesman
Part
276 Intro| then quickly returned to youth and beauty. The white locks
277 Intro| man were restored to their youth and fineness; the young
278 Intro| as the old returned to youth, so the dead returned to
279 Intro| Sophist and a corruptor of youth; and if he try to persuade
280 Intro| have often been discussed; youth is too ready to believe
281 Intro| in which the thoughts of youth and love have fled away,
282 Intro| than they had been in his youth, and were to become worse
283 Text | after the return of age to youth, follows the return of the
The Symposium
Part
284 Intro| flies away when the bloom of youth is over, is disgraceful,
285 Intro| customs—one the love of youth, the other the practice
286 Intro| Antinous. But the love of youth when not depraved was a
287 Intro| honourable attachment of a youth to an elder man was a part
288 Intro| a great man for a noble youth into a connexion of another
289 Intro| elder friend to a beloved youth was often deemed to be a
290 Text | in all the splendour of youth the day before yesterday,
291 Text | the lover than a beloved youth. For the principle which
292 Text | therefore when the bloom of youth which he was desiring is
293 Text | customs, one the love of youth, and the other the practice
294 Text | manhood they are lovers of youth, and are not naturally inclined
295 Text | whether he be a lover of youth or a lover of another sort,
296 Text | the youngest, and of his youth he is himself the witness,
297 Text | will not come near him; but youth and love live and move together—
298 Text | interval which elapses between youth and age, and in which every
299 Text | and justice. And he who in youth has the seed of these implanted
300 Text | this matter should begin in youth to visit beautiful forms;
301 Text | love with the beauty of one youth or man or institution, himself
302 Text | of the attractions of my youth. In the prosecution of this
303 Text | just as if he were a fair youth, and I a designing lover.
304 Text | more violent in ingenuous youth than any serpent’s tooth,
305 Text | great desire to praise the youth.~Hurrah! cried Agathon,
Theaetetus
Part
306 Intro| place when Theaetetus was a youth, and shortly before the
307 Intro| for the interval between youth and manhood, the dialogue
308 Intro| recalls the promise of his youth, and especially the famous
309 Intro| his answers. At first the youth is lost in wonder, and is
310 Intro| the great question. Like a youth, he has not finally made
311 Intro| where he is introduced as a youth); but he is by no means
312 Intro| had seen him when he was a youth, and had a remarkable conversation
313 Intro| he has found any Athenian youth likely to attain distinction
314 Intro| there is one very remarkable youth, with whom I have become
315 Intro| informed by Theodorus that the youth is named Theaetetus, but
316 Intro| who has the advantage of youth.~Theaetetus replies, that
317 Intro| when the tenderness of youth was unable to meet them
318 Intro| him when the tenderness of youth was unequal to them’; or
319 Intro| of wonder and novelty: in youth they seem to have a natural
320 Intro| metaphysicians in their youth, as they advance in years
321 Text | death, when Theaetetus was a youth, and he had a memorable
322 Text | interested in our own Athenian youth, and I would rather know
323 Text | very remarkable Athenian youth, whom I commend to you as
324 Text | have forgotten, but the youth himself is the middle one
325 Text | him.~SOCRATES: I know the youth, but I do not know his name;
326 Text | improve more than I shall, for youth is always able to improve.
327 Text | stiffness; let some more supple youth try a fall with you, and
328 Text | unlike those who from their youth upwards have been knocking
329 Text | that of a slave from his youth upwards, has deprived him
330 Text | when the tenderness of youth was unequal to them, and
331 Text | so he has passed out of youth into manhood, having no
332 Text | philosophy have never, from their youth upwards, known their way
333 Text | old man, and I was a mere youth, and he appeared to me to
Timaeus
Part
334 Intro| called the Registration of Youth, at which our parents gave
335 Intro| had heard the narrative in youth when the memory is strongest
336 Intro| Greek history began with the youth Achilles and left off with
337 Intro| Achilles and left off with the youth Alexander.’ The numerous
338 Text | called the Registration of Youth, at which, according to
339 Text | instruction is given in youth to cure these evils, then