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2502 States Text | sea and cast away their freight; and are guilty of other
2503 Timae Intro| in the shape of food. The freshest and acutest forms of triangles
2504 Timae Intro| and impassioned soul may ‘fret the pigmy body to decay,’
2505 Repub 7 | head back and study the fretted ceiling, you would still
2506 Repub 9 | faithless, more unjust, more friendless, more impious, than he was
2507 Apol Intro| towards them is one of real friendliness, but also of concealed irony.
2508 7Lett Text | war cry. Dionysios took fright and conceded all their demands
2509 Meno Text | virtue, and this too when frittered away into little pieces.
2510 Gorg Intro| sense; leave to others these frivolities; walk in the ways of the
2511 Timae Text | of theirs they had their front-legs and their heads resting
2512 Sympo Text | the sight of ugliness she frowns and contracts and has a
2513 Criti Intro| to which he opposes the frugal life of the true Hellenic
2514 Sympo Intro| saint might speak of the ‘fruitio Dei;’ as Dante saw all things
2515 Phileb Text | unconscious, and of which the fruition is palpable to sense and
2516 Laws 12 | old in the city or leave a fry of young ones like themselves
2517 Laws 8 | any stranger who likes buy fuel from day to day wholesale,
2518 Phaedo Intro| thousand years they were to be ‘fugitives and vagabonds upon the earth.’
2519 Repub 10 | guardian of their lives and the fulfiller of the choice: this genius
2520 Repub 3 | or tenor Lydian, and the full-toned or bass Lydian, and such
2521 Gorg Text | talking of cobblers and fullers and cooks and doctors, as
2522 Sophis Text | Every way like unto the fullness of a well-rounded sphere,
2523 Craty Text | diviners use, and their fumigations with drugs magical or medicinal,
2524 7Lett Text | give you security. Let the funds which he receives be deposited
2525 Repub 3 | into his soul through the funnel of his ears those sweet
2526 Sophis Text | the arts of fulling and of furbishing in general attend in a number
2527 Repub 3 | than gold is proved in the furnace, that we may discover whether
2528 Craty Intro| The latter are regarded as furnishing a type of excellence to
2529 Timae Text | them, such as glass and the fusible sort of stones, have less
2530 Timae Text | makes the most complete fusion of itself and the things
2531 Repub 10 | man he is, and making a fuss about his troubles; he thinks
2532 Phaedr Text | rational investigation of futurity, whether made by the help
2533 Thaeet Intro| confound one with the other.~g. That the progress of Physiology
2534 Charm PreS | several friends: of the Rev. G.G. Bradley, Master of University
2535 Criti Text | now called the region of Gades in that part of the world,
2536 Euthyp Text | you, the time might pass gaily enough in the court; but
2537 Repub 3 | s own loss and another's gain-these things we shall forbid them
2538 Repub 10 | proved we shall surely be the gainers-I mean, if there is a use
2539 Timae Intro| elements of bitterness and gall, and a suffusion of bilious
2540 Gorg Intro| and in fair weather sails gallantly along. But unpopularity
2541 7Lett Text | they sent a thirty-oared galley with Lamiscos, one of themselves,
2542 States Text | done with the old-fashioned galleys, if they have to fight with
2543 Repub 1 | and thieves, or any other gang of evildoers could act at
2544 Gorg Text | carrying you off, you will gape and your head will swim
2545 Repub 7 | upward, and whether a man gapes at the heavens or blinks
2546 Sympo Text | hiccough is no better, then gargle with a little water; and
2547 Thaeet Text | own stupidity and tiresome garrulity; for what other term will
2548 Lache Text | argument, and at the last gasp: you see our extremity,
2549 Phileb Text | all manner of colours, he gasps for breath, and is quite
2550 7Lett Text | house, from which even the gatekeeper would have refused to let
2551 Laws 9 | of Heaven affirm, like, gatherers of stones or beginners of
2552 Laws 1 | would you not, that in all gatherings of man, kind, of whatever
2553 Repub 7 | and unless he can run the gauntlet of all objections, and is
2554 Repub 8 | are full of pleasantry and gayety; they are loth to be thought
2555 Phaedr Text | of a god; then while he gazes on him there is a sort of
2556 Repub 5 | and left only his fighting gear behind him-is not this rather
2557 Craty Text | Homer (Od.) gegaasi means gegennesthai.~HERMOGENES: Good.~SOCRATES:
2558 2Alci Pre | ta gar echthes kai proen gegonota tauta, k.t.l. There are
2559 Sophis Intro| described as Spirit or ‘Geist,’ is really impersonal.
2560 7Lett Text | that which befell them in Gelon’s time, whereas in our own
2561 Phaedo Text | sardonyxes and jaspers, and other gems, which are but minute fragments
2562 Euthyd Intro| syllogism is indicated in the genealogical trees of the Sophist and
2563 Thaeet Text | wonder. He was not a bad genealogist who said that Iris (the
2564 Craty Intro| well as too few; and they generalize the objects or ideas which
2565 Timae Intro| were not the rash and hasty generalizers which, since the days of
2566 Gorg Intro| speculative turn of mind, he generalizes the bad side of human nature,
2567 Timae Intro| over-mastered by the power of the generative organs, and the woman is
2568 Sympo Intro| yet not without a certain generosity which gained the hearts
2569 Craty Intro| Aphrodite dia ten tou athrou genesin may be accepted on the authority
2570 Thaeet Intro| omologian pote epistemen genesthai; Plato Republic.~Monon gar
2571 Charm PreF | Platonische Studien;’ Susemihl’s ‘Genetische Entwickelung der Paltonischen
2572 Charm Text | conceivable. The use of the genitive after the comparative in
2573 Charm PreS | is also greatly felt. Two genitives dependent on one another,
2574 Euthyd Text | temples, or any other mark of gentility.~Nay, Dionysodorus, I said,
2575 Phaedo Text | very unlike the notions of geographers, as I believe on the authority
2576 Timae Intro| considered—the mythological or geographical. Is it not a wonderful thing
2577 Criti Intro| names and indications of geography are intermingled (‘Why,
2578 Repub 7 | and more advanced part of geometry-whether that tends in any degree
2579 Sophis Text | must be called by some name germane to the matter?~THEAETETUS:
2580 Phaedo Text | into another body and there germinates and grows, and has therefore
2581 Craty Intro| explained, oti airei ta apo tes ges; or, oti aei rei; or, oti
2582 Laws 7 | good sir? In the process of gestation?~Athenian. Exactly. I am
2583 Craty Intro| assisted or half expressed by gesticulation. A sound or word is not
2584 Craty Intro| look and behaviour, whose gesticulations and other peculiarities
2585 Phaedo Intro| old Homeric notion of a gibbering ghost flitting away to Hades;
2586 Euthyp Text | you must find some other gibe, for they certainly, as
2587 Timae Intro| entrance of the Straits of Gibraltar, in Sweden or in Palestine.
2588 Craty Intro| nomesis; noesis is neou or gignomenon esis; the word neos implies
2589 Euthyd Text | out of their own skulls gilt, and see the inside of them,
2590 Craty Intro| or, oti pneuma ex autou ginetai (compare the poetic word
2591 Laws 7 | who trusts to his nets and gins, shall not be allowed to
2592 Laws 12 | all have their cords, and girders, and sinews—one nature diffused
2593 Repub 8 | the great king within him, girt with tiara and chain and
2594 Craty Intro| and countries,—like the glacier, too, containing within
2595 Repub 1 | the narrator. CEPHALUS.~GLACON. THRASYMACHUS.~ADEIMANTUS.
2596 Meno Intro| body to meet in the pineal gland, that alone affording a
2597 Repub 7 | suffer sharp pains; the glare will distress him, and he
2598 Sympo Intro| taste, which to us is so glaring and which was recognized
2599 Thaeet Intro| here and there only does a gleam of light come through the
2600 Phaedo Text | and are seen like light gleaming amid the diversity of the
2601 Craty Text | glutinous clammy nature, as in glischros, glukus, gloiodes. The nu
2602 Timae Text | bright and shining and of a glistening appearance, including pitch,
2603 Timae Text | in kind, and has both a glittering and a yellow colour. A shoot
2604 Timae Intro| earth and air, two kinds of globules are formed—one of earthy
2605 Thaeet Intro| At the other end of the ‘globus intellectualis,’ nearest,
2606 Craty Text | as in glischros, glukus, gloiodes. The nu he observed to be
2607 Phaedo Text | Such are those thick and gloomy shadows damp Oft seen in
2608 Thaeet Text | helped himself in a far more gloriose style.~THEODORUS: You are
2609 Repub 5 | said; and when a man dies gloriously in war shall we not say,
2610 Thaeet Text | of Euripides, Hippol.: e gloss omomoch e de thren anomotos.)~
2611 Timae Text | and the flesh, not only glues the flesh to the bones,
2612 Craty Text | in the word kollodes (gluey), and the like: the heavier
2613 Craty Text | nature, as in glischros, glukus, gloiodes. The nu he observed
2614 7Lett Text | of eating or drinking or glutting himself with that slavish
2615 Phaedr Text | possessed by it is called a glutton; the tyrannical desire of
2616 Phaedr Text | treasuries of diplasiology, and gnomology, and eikonology, and who
2617 Repub 9 | aloud for food; and he, goaded on by them, and especially
2618 Craty Text | rightly called aipolos (goat-herd), he being the two-formed
2619 Laws 1 | goats feeding without a goatherd in cultivated spots, and
2620 Craty Text | upper part, and rough and goatlike in his lower regions. And,
2621 Crito Text | which you were wrapped in a goatskin or some other disguise,
2622 Phaedr Intro| bliss, when he beholds a god-like form or face is amazed with
2623 Sympo Text | the love of the heavenly godess, and is heavenly, and of
2624 Craty Intro| more God; tell me about my godfather Hermes.’ He is ermeneus,
2625 Apol Text | I do not believe in the godhead of the sun or moon, like
2626 Protag Text | replied, and the impetuous or goers. (You may remember, Protagoras,
2627 7Lett Text | case I was prevented from going-since plainly and obviously I
2628 7Lett Text | comparison something precious as gold-for among other things they
2629 Craty Intro| with pheresthai; gnome is gones skepsis kai nomesis; noesis
2630 Repub 3 | great sign of the want of good-breeding, that a man should have
2631 Repub 3 | employment; and therefore bidding good-by to this sort of physician,
2632 Gorg Intro| Socrates he is soon restored to good-humour, and compelled to assent
2633 Repub 2 | not merely conventional good-I would ask you in your praise
2634 Repub 8 | some cases the reverse of good-shall we not be right in saying
2635 Repub 6 | satisfied with the appearance of good-the reality is what they seek;
2636 Repub 6 | those who are called by them goodfor-nothings and star-gazers. ~Precisely
2637 Repub 2 | now: How would you arrange goods-are there not some which we
2638 Gorg Text | in while running after a goose, and had been killed. And
2639 Gorg Intro| die is better for them (Gor.): (13) the treatment of
2640 Sophis Intro| said to a niece of King Gorboduc, “That that is is”...for
2641 Repub 9 | the wild beast within us, gorged with meat or drink, starts
2642 Sympo Text | Agathon was shaking at me the Gorginian or Gorgonian head of the
2643 Sympo Text | shaking at me the Gorginian or Gorgonian head of the great master
2644 Phaedr Text | Hippocentaurs and chimeras dire. Gorgons and winged steeds flow in
2645 Laws 4 | at the present day is the Gortynian, and this has come from
2646 Laws 4 | and this has come from Gortys in the Peloponnesus.~Athenian.
2647 Timae Intro| the two writers. Similar gossiping stories are told about the
2648 Sympo Intro| Phaedrus is marked by a sort of Gothic irregularity. More too than
2649 Parme Intro| of Parmenides and Plato, ‘Gott-betrunkene Menschen,’ there still remained
2650 Thaeet Text | empty; whenever a man has gotten and detained in the enclosure
2651 Craty Text | suspect to be the same word as goun (birth): thelu (female)
2652 Repub 7 | said, Glaucon, and of our governesses too; for you must not suppose
2653 Repub 8 | answers to this form of government-how did he come into being,
2654 Craty Intro| another by imperceptible gradation. But in both cases the newly-created
2655 Thaeet Intro| in form and exquisitely graduated by distance, which we are
2656 Craty Intro| spelt correctly and written grammatically.~(9) Proceeding further
2657 Repub 5 | call the elder generation grandfathers and grandmothers. All who
2658 Gorg Text | talk, Callicles, in your grandiose style, he would bury you
2659 Repub 5 | generation grandfathers and grandmothers. All who were begotten at
2660 Euthyd Text | laugh at me and call him grandpapa’s master. Now I should not
2661 Timae Text | elder generation parents and grandparents, and those of a younger,
2662 Gorg Intro| presented in the most lively and graphic manner, but they are never
2663 Sophis Text | making appearances, he will grapple with us and retort our argument
2664 Thaeet Intro| higher aspect of his being he grasps the ideas of God, freedom
2665 Criti Intro| and fragrant herbs, and grasses, and trees bearing fruit.
2666 Menex Text | places; and they should be gratefully remembered by us, because
2667 Ion Text | cheese of goat’s milk with a grater of bronze, and at his side
2668 Laws 11 | spring up. For the speaker gratifies his anger, which is an ungracious
2669 Repub 4 | skilful in anticipating and gratifying their humors is held to
2670 Repub 5 | their sepulchres as at the graves of heroes. And not only
2671 Repub 3 | are guilty of making the gravest misstatements when they
2672 1Alci Text | hands, and by the art of graving rings of that which belongs
2673 Phaedr Text | aloft and carry that which gravitates downwards into the upper
2674 Repub 9 | like contrasting black with gray instead of white-can you
2675 1Alci Text | way. For the demus of the great-hearted Erechteus is of a fair countenance,
2676 7Lett Text | of general wickedness and greed they had reached. This was
2677 Repub 9 | His soul is dainty and greedy, and yet alone, of all men
2678 7Lett Text | than of any of the Sicilian Greeks-and, with him, other men of
2679 7Lett Text | here followed the customary greeting and immediately after it
2680 Repub 7 | than in the laugh which greets him who returns from above
2681 States Intro| and the young men became greyheaded; no longer did the animals
2682 Charm PreF | Zeller’s ‘Philosophie der Griechen,’ and ‘Platonische Studien;’
2683 Laws 4 | any desire to recall past grievances); but he, as we know, was
2684 Phaedo Text | expectations I had formed, and how grievously was I disappointed! As I
2685 Repub 3 | feared ~"Lest the mansions grim and squalid which the gods
2686 States Intro| world under a harder and grimmer aspect: he is dealing with
2687 Gorg Text | when he has got you in his grip and is carrying you off,
2688 Thaeet Text | the shaggy and rugged and gritty, or those who have an admixture
2689 Repub 9 | lamentation and sorrow and groaning and pain? ~Certainly not. ~
2690 Phaedo Text | beginning to grow cold about the groin, when he uncovered his face,
2691 Sophis Intro| not Materialists in the grosser sense of the term, nor were
2692 Repub 2 | about justice and injustice, grossly, as I conceive, perverting
2693 Gorg Intro| your only philosopher: the grotesque and rather paltry image
2694 Laws 7 | tactics, and the mode of grounding and taking up arms; if for
2695 Thaeet Intro| the imagination, is still grovelling on the level of sense.~We
2696 Sympo Intro| article of Meier in Ersch and Grueber’s Cyclopedia on this subject;
2697 Protag Text | he opened and saw us, he grumbled: They are Sophists—he is
2698 Laws 4 | notion of them if we can guarantee one thing.~Cleinias. What
2699 Thaeet Intro| introduced Theaetetus, and having guaranteed the authenticity of the
2700 Criti Text | race in. Also there were guard-houses at intervals for the guards,
2701 Repub 5 | gymnastics to the wives of the guardians-to that point we come round
2702 Euthyd Text | and yours, he said.~And gudgeons and puppies and pigs are
2703 Repub 1 | wisdom and virtue. ~You have guessed most infallibly, he replied. ~
2704 Phileb Text | saying just now, is full of guesswork and imitation, and is wanting
2705 7Lett Text | the breach of faith to a guest-so he put it and regarded it,
2706 Repub 3 | the time of Herodicus, the guild of Asclepius did not practise
2707 Phaedr Text | the soul of a philosopher, guileless and true, or the soul of
2708 Timae Intro| as the modern reader in Gulliver or Robinson Crusoe. On the
2709 Thaeet Intro| Monon gar auto legeiv, osper gumnon kai aperemomenon apo ton
2710 Phaedr Text | irritation and uneasiness in the gums at the time of cutting teeth,—
2711 Phaedr Text | Pharmacia, when a northern gust carried her over the neighbouring
2712 Protag Text | even under the name of gymnastic-masters, like Iccus of Tarentum,
2713 1Alci Text | more excellent, or the more gymnastical was the more excellent,
2714 Thaeet Intro| with little or no success.~h. The impossibility of distinguishing
2715 Lysis Intro| saying, Qui amicos amicum non habet. But is not some less exclusive
2716 1Alci Text | named after her several habiliments. Now, I cannot help thinking
2717 Repub 4 | that our city has been made habitable, light a candle and search,
2718 Repub 9 | he can never have enough, habituates him in the days of his youth
2719 Menex Text | Hellas; the one teaching and habituating the Hellenes not to fear
2720 States Intro| by the hundred years of Hadrian and the Antonines. The kings
2721 Charm PreS | respecting the Magna Moralia:—Haec non sunt Aristotelis, tamen
2722 Timae Intro| Democritus (Hippolyt. Ref. Haer. I.) had said, would be,
2723 Sympo Intro| the two others, who are half-asleep, that the genius of tragedy
2724 Phaedo Intro| the symbol of a creature half-bird, half-human, nor in any
2725 Gorg Intro| captain in the Republic, half-blind and deaf, but with penetrating
2726 States Intro| found already existing in a half-civilised state of society: these
2727 Gorg Intro| led into a half-serious, half-comic vein of reflection. ‘Who
2728 Gorg Intro| would fain say, and the half-conscious feeling is strengthened
2729 Craty Intro| impatient of hearing from the half-converted Cratylus the doctrine that
2730 Euthyd Intro| kind of difficulty to the half-educated man which spelling or arithmetic
2731 Sympo Intro| his name, is half-sophist, half-enthusiast. He is the critic of poetry
2732 Sympo Intro| Phaedrus is half-mythical, half-ethical; and he himself, true to
2733 Timae Intro| legend seems to have been half-forgotten until revived by the discovery
2734 Timae Text | for all smells are of a half-formed nature, and no element is
2735 Phaedo Intro| of a creature half-bird, half-human, nor in any other form of
2736 Gorg Intro| told that we are more than half-inclined to believe them (compare
2737 Sympo Intro| and receives the real, if half-ironical, approval of Socrates. It
2738 Thaeet Intro| Not-being should be a dusky, half-lighted place (Republic), belonging
2739 Sympo Intro| s own. There are so many half-lights and cross-lights, so much
2740 Sympo Intro| discourse of Phaedrus is half-mythical, half-ethical; and he himself,
2741 Timae Intro| poets moved in a region of half-personification in which the meaning or
2742 Charm Ded | copy of a new Edition at half-price.~
2743 Gorg Intro| Socrates in reply is led into a half-serious, half-comic vein of reflection. ‘
2744 Timae Intro| a briny nature then two half-solid bodies are formed by separating
2745 Timae Text | out of either of them a half-solid-body is then formed, soluble
2746 Sympo Intro| Dialogue bearing his name, is half-sophist, half-enthusiast. He is
2747 Repub 1 | their victims; they were but half-villains in their enterprises; for
2748 Phaedr Text | thought that you were only half-way and were going to make a
2749 Repub 4 | Here I saw something: Halloo! I said, I begin to perceive
2750 Repub 9 | both directions until he halted midway and led a life, not
2751 States Text | divided, just as you might halve an even number.~YOUNG SOCRATES:
2752 Craty Intro| were Sterne, Jean Paul, Hamann,— writers who sometimes
2753 Parme Intro| Kant’s Kritik, and of the Hamiltonian adaptation of Kant, as well
2754 Laws 8 | twelfth portion, and in each hamlet they shall first set apart
2755 Laws 8 | them. There shall be twelve hamlets, one in the middle of each
2756 Euthyd Text | business, and if he were to hammer the smith, and make a pot
2757 Thaeet Text | becomes,’ we shall not then hamper them with words expressive
2758 Lysis Intro| enough of the Scimus et hanc veniam petimusque damusque
2759 7Lett Text | professes to be his own handbook, very different, so he says,
2760 Sympo Text | s side, although a mere handful, they would overcome the
2761 Lysis Text | allowed to throw in salt by handfuls, whereas the son will not
2762 Euthyp Text | Euthyphro, are like the handiwork of my ancestor Daedalus;
2763 Sophis Text | magicians, you see that the handles for objection and the difficulties
2764 Thaeet Text | the clever witty Thracian handmaid is said to have made about
2765 Repub 4 | what they have in their hands-that was the way with us-we looked
2766 Timae Text | that we can; having been handsomely entertained by you yesterday,
2767 Timae Intro| ideas about science, on the haphazard fancies and a priori assumptions
2768 Repub 4 | we might make every class happy-and then, as you imagine, the
2769 Sophis Text | there is the dissembler, who harangues a multitude in public in
2770 Laws 4 | which a maritime people are harassed by enemies, as the Athenians
2771 Repub 4 | exactions of market and harbor dues which may be required,
2772 Repub 2 | afraid, if he did wrong, of harboring in himself the greatest
2773 Repub 4 | regulations of markets, police, harbors, and the like.. But, O heavens!
2774 Laws 7 | we fashion wax before it hardens, and after birth swathe
2775 Thaeet Text | no one had any longer the hardihood to contend of any ordinances
2776 Gorg Intro| there is another class of hardly-curable sinners who are allowed
2777 Laws 11 | there may sometimes be a hardship in the lawgiver commanding
2778 Repub 6 | and pains, and neither in hardships, nor in dangers, nor at
2779 Repub 9 | some newfangled love of a harlot, who is anything but a necessary
2780 Laws 8 | unconsecrated and bastard seed among harlots, or in barren and unnatural
2781 Craty Text | take the words blaberon (harmful), zemiodes (hurtful).~HERMOGENES:
2782 Repub 10 | power which poetry has of harming even the good (and there
2783 Repub 6 | Or again: can he who is harmoniously constituted, who is not
2784 7Lett Text | which did not seem likely to harmonise with my teaching or with
2785 Timae Text | meeting together and mutually harmonising, again become earth; for
2786 Protag Text | nor dancing-girls, nor harp-girls; and they have no nonsense
2787 Ion Text | one among flute-players or harp-players or singers to the harp or
2788 Repub 1 | in playing the harp the harpplayer is certainly a better partner
2789 Meno Intro| especially Laws). In the Laws he harps once more on the old string,
2790 Repub 8 | reason, passes into the harshest and bitterest form of slavery. ~
2791 States Text | man; and this led you to hasten the steps. But you should
2792 Charm PreF | Laws. Dr. Greenhill, of Hastings, has also kindly sent me
2793 1Alci Text | by the bird whom I have hatched.~ALCIBIADES: Strange, but
2794 Apol Intro| character, and this apparent haughtiness as flowing from the natural
2795 Phaedo Text | Like children, you are haunted with a fear that when the
2796 Timae Intro| walking in the garden or haunting stream or mountain. He feels
2797 Repub 6 | which the public in general have-he will do as they do, and
2798 Timae Text | and to bring us to the haven of probability. So now let
2799 Laws 2 | on and make still further havoc by separating the rhythm
2800 Sophis Text | wares of the soul which are hawked about either for the sake
2801 Phaedo Text | pass into wolves, or into hawks and kites;—whither else
2802 Repub 6 | and I then shrank from hazarding the bold word; but now let
2803 Protag Text | mind that you will at all hazards be a pupil of Protagoras,
2804 Meno Intro| and the like. And when a hazy conception of this ideal
2805 Timae Intro| in long periods of time (Hdt.). But he seems to have
2806 Repub 8 | knock ambition and passion headforemost from his bosom's throne;
2807 Charm PreS | also, in the Third Edition, headings to the pages and a marginal
2808 Laws 6 | world without a head;—a headless monster is such a hideous
2809 Laws 6 | is conscious of being too headstrong, and carried away more than
2810 States Text | only does them good and heals and saves them. And this
2811 Repub 3 | the eye and ear, like a health-giving breeze from a purer region,
2812 Laws 2 | and utility is just the healthfulness of the things served up
2813 Repub 2 | discomposed; for example, when healthiest and strongest, the human
2814 Phaedr Text | and reproaches, which he heaps upon the charioteer and
2815 Repub 6 | sure that you wished to hear-otherwise, not. ~By all means, he
2816 Repub 1 | interests of seeing and hearing-has art in itself, I say, any
2817 Laws 9 | actions, and to him who hearkens to them the law has nothing
2818 Gorg Text | tell you now is not mere hearsay, but well known both to
2819 States Intro| with a divine cord in a heaven-born nature, and then fastening
2820 Apol Intro| theirs; because he is their heaven-sent friend (and they will never
2821 Phaedr Text | who have once begun the heavenward pilgrimage may not go down
2822 Meno Intro| leave the earth and soar heavenwards, but soon has found that
2823 2Alci Pre | Alcibiades is stupid and heavy-in-hand. There are traces of Stoic
2824 Repub 2 | all in a day, whether with heavyarmed or any other kind of troops? ~
2825 Gorg Intro| discipline received from Hebraism remain for our race an eternal
2826 Gorg Intro| praise knowing; for we have Hebraized too much and have overvalued
2827 Ion Text | know the passage in which Hecamede, the concubine of Nestor,
2828 Meno Intro| said to have sacrificed a hecatomb—is elicited from him. The
2829 2Alci Text | encampment,~‘Offered up whole hecatombs to the immortals,’~and how
2830 Ion Text | the sorrows of Andromache, Hecuba, or Priam,—are you in your
2831 Phileb Intro| thinker the Utilitarian or hedonist mode of speaking has been
2832 Craty Intro| anything that he is told, heightens the effect. Socrates in
2833 Laws 11 | absolutely to them; and let the heiress in the first degree be a
2834 Laws 1 | laws about allotments and heiresses, another about assaults;
2835 Phaedr Intro| obscene romances of Longus and Heliodorus, innumerable forged epistles,
2836 Euthyd Text | medicine, a cartload of hellebore will not be too much for
2837 Gorg Intro| for us, it is a time to Hellenize and to praise knowing; for
2838 Repub 10 | ring of Gyges he put on the helmet of Hades. ~Very true. ~And
2839 Repub 6 | mutinous sailors, and the true helmsmen to those who are called
2840 Repub 1 | but because they cannot help-not under the idea that they
2841 Phileb Text | determination of them is very helpful.~PROTARCHUS: Then, Socrates,
2842 Phaedr Intro| woman being the intellectual helpmate or friend of man (except
2843 Lysis Text | knew that his son had drunk hemlock, and the father thought
2844 Craty Intro| than the conjectures of Hemsterhuis, and other critics of the
2845 Charm PreS | have overlooked it. Dr. Henry Jackson, of Trinity College,
2846 Repub 10 | be delighted to receive her-we are very conscious of her
2847 Timae Text | attraction of amber and the Heraclean stones,—in none of these
2848 Menex Text | the Cadmeians, or of the Heracleids against the Argives; besides,
2849 Craty Intro| speculation to oppose to the Heracleiteanism of Cratylus.~The theory
2850 Laws 6 | slavery which exists among the Heracleots, who have subjugated the
2851 Laws 5 | as we were saying, the Heraclid colony had, and which is
2852 Ion Text | Phanosthenes of Andros, and Heraclides of Clazomenae, whom they
2853 Thaeet Intro| absolute negation in which Heracliteanism was sunk in the age of Plato.
2854 Criti Text | earth, whether roots, or herbage, or woods, or essences which
2855 Thaeet Intro| based upon the views of Herbart and other German philosophers,
2856 Thaeet Intro| my complaint. And many a Hercules, many a Theseus mighty in
2857 Craty Intro| Jesuit, Puritan, Methodist, Heretic, has been often converted
2858 Charm PreF | Paltonischen Philosophie;’ Hermann’s ‘Geschichte der Platonischen
2859 Sophis Intro| Clown: For as the old hermit of Prague, that never saw
2860 Repub 8 | to Croesus, ~"By pebbly Hermus's shore he flees and rests
2861 Repub 2 | of the nature of gods and heroes-as when a painter paints a
2862 Phaedr Text | out of dithyrambics into heroics, when only uttering a censure
2863 Craty Text | see better that the name heros is only a slight alteration
2864 Laws 11 | and his son doubts and hesitates about indicting his father
2865 Sophis Text | of it are too minute and heterogeneous.~STRANGER: But that which
2866 Laws 7 | great many poets writing in hexameter, trimeter, and all sorts
2867 Repub 8 | years have elapsed, and the heyday of passion is over-supposing
2868 Laws 6 | headless monster is such a hideous thing.~Cleinias. Excellent,
2869 Sympo Intro| the things which nature hides, and that the more frequent
2870 Repub 2 | and weavers fleeces and hides-still our State will not be very
2871 7Lett Text | for him than it was for Hiero. If these things had been
2872 Sophis Intro| meaning, like that of some hieroglyphic, would have remained undeciphered,
2873 Phaedr Text | the life of a prophet or hierophant; to the sixth the character
2874 Sophis Intro| that he is a disputant, and higgles over an argument. A feature
2875 Craty Intro| He is discoursing in a high-flown vein, which may be compared
2876 Repub 8 | see who is valiant, who is high-minded, who is wise, who is wealthy;
2877 Repub 7 | other science can be placed higher-the nature of knowledge can
2878 Phaedo Text | fairer in colour than our highly-valued emeralds and sardonyxes
2879 Phileb Intro| there occur two or three highly-wrought passages; instead of the
2880 2Alci Text | keep silence; for your ‘highmindedness’—to use the mildest term
2881 Phaedo Text | the sun is still upon the hill-tops, and I know that many a
2882 Repub 6 | strong beast who is fed by him-he would learn how to approach
2883 Repub 3 | should be of no avail to him-the daughter of Chryses should
2884 Repub 4 | person may inflict upon him-these he deems to be just, and,
2885 Repub 8 | all their fears are for him-they have none for themselves. ~
2886 Repub 9 | there are no freemen to help him-will he not be in an agony of
2887 Repub 10 | is the man at unity with himself-or, rather, as in the instance
2888 Repub 5 | the body of the other is a hinderance to him? -would not these
2889 Parme Intro| controversies appear to hinge, which would not have existed,
2890 Repub 8 | banishes, at the same time hinting at the abolition of debts
2891 Sympo Intro| works of love, and also hints incidentally that love is
2892 Charm PreS | the statement respecting Hipparinus and Nysaeus, the nephews
2893 Phaedr Text | must go on and rehabilitate Hippocentaurs and chimeras dire. Gorgons
2894 Thaeet Text | well-known line of Euripides, Hippol.: e gloss omomoch e de thren
2895 Timae Intro| of worlds, as Democritus (Hippolyt. Ref. Haer. I.) had said,
2896 Timae Text | thighs and the shanks and the hips, and the bones of the arms
2897 Protag Text | flute-girls in the market, hiring for a great sum the voice
2898 Laws 3 | was not expressed in a hiss, nor in the most unmusical
2899 Thaeet Text | noise, as of the tongue hissing; B, and most other letters,
2900 Timae Intro| of the Ten Tribes (Ewald, Hist. of Isr.), which perhaps
2901 Gorg Text | verba are laws?~SOCRATES: Ho! my philosopher, is that
2902 Repub 8 | silver, which they will hoard in dark places, having magazines
2903 Gorg Text | noble Polus, you are raising hobgoblins instead of refuting me;
2904 Sympo Intro| virtuous form.~(Compare Hoeck’s Creta and the admirable
2905 Laws 12 | twelve parts, and prove the holders of them by every sort of
2906 Gorg Intro| of holes, in a similarly holey sieve, and this sieve is
2907 States Text | knowledge to act justly and holily to all; they fancy that
2908 Craty Intro| Socrates, he saw through the hollowness of the incipient sciences
2909 Sophis Intro| wares are either imported or home-made, like those of other retail
2910 Phaedr Text | be wifeless, childless, homeless, as well; and the longer
2911 Gorg Intro| writing. This is due to their homeliness and simplicity. Plato can
2912 Repub 2 | the battles of the gods in Homer-these tales must not be admitted
2913 Ion Text | Homer. I think that the Homeridae should give me a golden
2914 Repub 10 | said Glaucon; not even the Homerids themselves pretend that
2915 Laws 9 | be washed out until the homicidal soul which the deed has
2916 Apol Intro| sceptical. He is arguing ‘ad hominem’ according to the notions
2917 Thaeet Intro| last example speaks ‘ad hominen.’ For Protagoras would never
2918 Thaeet Intro| devised by Socrates for his ‘homo mensura,’ which Theodorus
2919 Laws 4 | colonies which are of this homogeneous sort are apt to kick against
2920 Repub 5 | gods; and as to the sweet "honey-pale," as they are called, what
2921 Phaedr Intro| dislike. In the days of their honeymoon they never understood that
2922 Repub 8 | paid for this and receive honor-the greatest honor, as might
2923 Repub 9 | said. ~And the lover of honor-what will be his opinion? Will
2924 Gorg Text | alone can safely leave the honorarium to his pupils, if he be
2925 Repub 5 | praise his charming face; the hook-nose of another has, you say,
2926 Repub 5 | who is neither snub nor hooked has the grace of regularity:
2927 Sophis Intro| in order to damage the ‘hooker of men’ as much as possible;
2928 Phaedo Text | the swallow, nor yet the hoopoe; which are said indeed to
2929 Protag Text | listen to him, but laugh and hoot at him, until either he
2930 Laws 9 | in a theatre, clapping or hooting in turn this or that orator—
2931 Charm PreS | the Phaedo, though less hopefully, he had sought to convert
2932 Repub 8 | artisan, nor horseman, nor hoplite, but only a poor, helpless
2933 Craty Intro| Hermogenes in Plato and with Horace that usage is the ruling
2934 Charm PreS | tendencies may be called the horizontal and perpendicular lines
2935 Repub 5 | foundation, ignorant of what a hornet's nest of words you are
2936 Craty Intro| afraid of him, and talk with horror of the world below from
2937 Euthyd Intro| ritual. This is all a sort of horse-play, which is now ended. The
2938 Ion Text | careful of the turn at the horserace in honour of Patroclus.~
2939 Laws 12 | provided them at the temples by hospitable persons, and the priests
2940 Lysis Text | this relationship he was hospitably received by an ancestor
2941 Phaedr Intro| to sow his seed in such a hot-bed or garden of Adonis; he
2942 Timae Text | interior of every animal the hottest part is that which is around
2943 Euthyp Text | art which ministers to the house-builder with a view to the building
2944 Repub 2 | themselves? And when they are housed, they will work, in summer,
2945 Laws 11 | single family to the 5040 households; and, therefore, he who
2946 Repub 3 | own, they will become good housekeepers and husbandmen instead of
2947 Thaeet Intro| towards perfection, ‘it hovers about this lower world and
2948 Repub 10 | wasting time in setting up a howl, but always accustoming
2949 Repub 10 | saying of "the yelping hound howling at her lord," or of one "
2950 Laws 12 | to she–dogs uttering vain howlings, and talking other nonsense
2951 Craty Intro| The lion roars, the wolf howls in the solitude of the forest:
2952 Phaedr Text | luxurious diet, instead of the hues of health having the colours
2953 Repub 8 | termed by her "slaves" who hug their chains, and men of
2954 Craty Intro| pathetically described by Victor Hugo), from the imperfect articulation
2955 Repub 9 | and sees only the outer hull, may believe the beast to
2956 States Intro| tyrant,’ but gentle and humane, capable of being altered
2957 Thaeet Intro| Socrates, to adopt this humaner method, and to avoid captious
2958 Protag Text | been brought up in laws and humanities, would appear to be a just
2959 Repub 3 | tendency to civilize and humanize them in their relations
2960 Repub 9 | his nature silenced and humanized; the gentler element in
2961 Thaeet Text | you will be soberer and humbler and gentler to other men,
2962 Lysis Text | should talk to your beloved, humbling and lowering him, and not
2963 1Alci Intro| Alcibiades is thus reduced to the humiliating conclusion that he knows
2964 Crito Text | mystic; that voice, I say, is humming in my ears, and prevents
2965 Charm PreS | described in language; a ship is humorously supposed to be the sailor’
2966 Repub 4 | anticipating and gratifying their humors is held to be a great and
2967 Sophis Intro| reasoned with; and the equally humourous delineation of the friends
2968 Craty Intro| filled up. Not a tenth, not a hundredth part of them has been preserved.
2969 Repub 4 | arrived, Glaucon, when, like huntsmen, we should surround the
2970 Meno Text | upright on horseback and hurl a javelin, and to do many
2971 Phaedo Text | violent, or the like—such are hurled into Tartarus which is their
2972 Sympo Text | desire to praise the youth.~Hurrah! cried Agathon, I will rise
2973 Gorg Text | basely, and if basely, hurtfully.~CALLICLES: How confident
2974 Laws 3 | all conceivable ways of hurting one another in word and
2975 Sympo Text | love then evil and foul?’ ‘Hush,’ she cried; ‘must that
2976 Repub 3 | would not even go into the hut, but wanted to lie with
2977 Craty Intro| any more than of the first huts or buildings which were
2978 Sophis Intro| detect in him a sort of hybrid or double nature, of which,
2979 Repub 5 | takes part in the public hymeneals shall be said to have done
2980 Charm Text | Zamolxis or of Abaris the Hyperborean, and I may as well let you
2981 Protag Intro| satire on the tedious and hypercritical arts of interpretation which
2982 Gorg Intro| unconscious as well as a conscious hypocrisy which, according to Socrates,
2983 Laws 10 | legislation is required; one the hypocritical sort, whose crime is deserving
2984 Repub 6 | principles, but only as hypotheses-that is to say, as steps and
2985 Sympo Text | Euripides would say (Eurip. Hyppolytus)) was a promise of the lips
2986 Timae Intro| He is full of Porphyry, Iamblichus and Plotinus, of misapplied
2987 Laws 1 | Carthaginians, and Celts, and Iberians, and Thracians, who are
2988 Phaedr Text | bird which is called the Ibis is sacred to him, and he
2989 States Intro| But he soon falls, like Icarus, and is content to walk
2990 Timae Intro| octahedrons, water of regular icosahedrons. The stability of the last
2991 Repub 10 | in accordance with the idea-that is our way of speaking in
2992 Timae Intro| against Kant’s doctrine of the ideality of space and time at once
2993 Apol Intro| obedient to the laws. The idealization of the sufferer is carried
2994 Gorg Intro| treatises on ethics.~The idealizing of suffering is one of the
2995 Craty Intro| partake of the nature of idioms: they are taken out of the
2996 Thaeet Text | listening to the talk of idiots.~THEODORUS: Very true, Socrates.~
2997 States Intro| degenerate into a new kind of idolatry. Neither criticism nor experience
2998 Craty Text | because flowing with desire (iemenos), and expresses a longing
2999 Craty Text | imitative of motion, ienai, iesthai. And there is another class
3000 States Text | deservedly obtains the ignominious name of silliness.~YOUNG
3001 7Lett Text | expelled him from Syracuse with ignominy. All of us who were Dion’