Notes on Aristophanes and PlatoMacmillan, 1884 - 4 pages |
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Page 98
... Serrani , Vol . 1. p . 121 . Ρ . 124. Τον νεωστι Αρχοντα . ] Archelaus was then just come to the throne , and consequently this year , in which Diodorus first mentions him , was , it is probable , the first of his reign . ( V. Alcibiad ...
... Serrani , Vol . 1. p . 121 . Ρ . 124. Τον νεωστι Αρχοντα . ] Archelaus was then just come to the throne , and consequently this year , in which Diodorus first mentions him , was , it is probable , the first of his reign . ( V. Alcibiad ...
Page 101
... Serrani , Vol . 1. p . 2 . SOCRATES , 1 about the time that an accusation had been preferred against him for impiety in the court of the Baotlevs , 2 walking in the portico , where that magistrate used to sit in judgment , meets with ...
... Serrani , Vol . 1. p . 2 . SOCRATES , 1 about the time that an accusation had been preferred against him for impiety in the court of the Baotlevs , 2 walking in the portico , where that magistrate used to sit in judgment , meets with ...
Page 104
... Serrani , Vol . 1. p . 17 . P. 18. It is remarkable that he should mention this comedy of Aristophanes , as having made a deep impression on the people ; and yet it was brought on the stage twenty years before , where it was exploded ...
... Serrani , Vol . 1. p . 17 . P. 18. It is remarkable that he should mention this comedy of Aristophanes , as having made a deep impression on the people ; and yet it was brought on the stage twenty years before , where it was exploded ...
Page 110
... Serrani , Vol . 1. p . 43 . THIS beautiful dialogue ( besides Dacier's translation and Foster's notes ) has been translated and illustrated by the Abbé Sallier , keeper of the printed books in the French king's library ; see Vol . 14 ...
... Serrani , Vol . 1. p . 43 . THIS beautiful dialogue ( besides Dacier's translation and Foster's notes ) has been translated and illustrated by the Abbé Sallier , keeper of the printed books in the French king's library ; see Vol . 14 ...
Page 111
... Serrani , Vol . 1. p . 57 . THIS famous dialogue was supposed by Panatius1 the stoick , a great admirer of Plato , not to be genuine , or at least interpolated , rather , as it seems , from his own persuasion 2 of the soul's mortality ...
... Serrani , Vol . 1. p . 57 . THIS famous dialogue was supposed by Panatius1 the stoick , a great admirer of Plato , not to be genuine , or at least interpolated , rather , as it seems , from his own persuasion 2 of the soul's mortality ...
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Common terms and phrases
afterwards Alcibiades alludes ancient Andocides Archytas Aristophanes Aristotle Athenæus Athenian Athens birds body called Callias character chorus citizens Cleon comick court Dacier dæmon death dialogue Diodorus Diog Dion Dionysius divinity drama Edited epistle Euripides famous Fcap Gorgias Greece GREEK TEXT Herodotus Hipparinus Hippias honour imagine Isocrates justice Lacedæmonians Laert Laertius Legib Lysias mankind manner mentioned mind musick nature NOTES oration pain passage Pausanias perhaps Pericles Persian person Phædo Phædrus philosophy Pisthetærus Plat Plato pleasure Plutarch Plutus poet Protagoras publick Republ REPUBLICA says Scene Schol Scholia Scholiast seems Serrani shew Sicily Socrates Socrates's sophist soul Sparta Sympos Syracuse thing Thucyd Thucydides tion tragick virtue words Xenoph Xenophon αλλ γαρ γε δε δι δια ει εις εκ εν επι εστι και κατα μεν μη ου ουκ ουτε παντα ΠΕΡΙ προς τας τε τοις τω ὡς
Popular passages
Page 217 - ... not under their senses, they were fain to borrow words from ordinary known ideas of sensation, by that means to make others the more easily to conceive those operations they experimented in themselves, which made no outward sensible appearances...
Page 269 - Druids held the immortality of the soul, and a state of future rewards and punishments...
Page 127 - Happiness and misery are the names of two extremes, the utmost bounds whereof we know not; it is what 'eye hath not seen, ear not heard, nor hath it entered into the heart of man to conceive'.
Page 127 - ... in its natural state. But yet excess of cold as well as heat pains us, because it is equally destructive to that temper which is necessary to the preservation of life, and the exercise of the several functions of the body, and which consists in a moderate degree of warmth ; or, if you please, a motion of the insensible parts of our bodies, confined within certain bounds.
Page 212 - who are possessed of this faculty,' (that is, of fetching a voice from the belly or stomach) 'can manage their voice in so wonderful a manner that it shall seem to come from what part they please, not of themselves only, but of any other person in the company, or even from the bottom of a well, down a chimney, from below stairs, &c. &c. of which I myself have been witness.
Page 241 - there is no natural difference between the sexes, but in point of strength. When the entire sexes are compared together, the female is doubtless the inferior ; but in individuals, the woman has often the advantage of the man."* In this opinion I have no doubt that Plato is in the right.