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[339a] of a man's education is to be skilled in the matter of verses; that is, to be able to apprehend, in the utterances of the poets, what has been rightly and what wrongly composed, and to know how to distinguish them and account for them when questioned. Accordingly my question now will be on the same subject that you and I are now debating, namely virtue, but taken in connexion with poetry: that will be the only difference. Now, Simonides, I think, somewhere remarks to Scopas, the son of Creon of Thessaly


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  • Commentary references to this page (3):
    • James A. Towle, Commentary on Plato: Protagoras, 313a
    • James A. Towle, Commentary on Plato: Protagoras, 316d
    • James A. Towle, Commentary on Plato: Protagoras, 340e
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