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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Plato, Republic. Search the whole document.
Found 15 total hits in 3 results.
Kroll (Oregon, United States) (search for this): book 3, section 391b
And how he was disobedient to the
river,Scamander. Iliad 21.130-132. who was a god
and was ready to fight with him, and again that he said of the locks of his
hair, consecrated to her river Spercheius: ‘This let me give to take with him my hair to the hero,
Patroclus,’Hom. Il. 23.151Cf. Proclus, p. 146 Kroll. Plato exaggerates to make his
case. The locks were vowed to Spercheius on the condition of Achilles'
return. In their context the words are innocent enough. who was a
dead body, and that he did so we must believe. And again the trailings
Iliad
xxiv. 14 ff. of Hector's body round the grave of Patroclus and the
slaughter
Iliad
xxiii. 175-176. of the livi
Hector (California, United States) (search for this): book 3, section 391b
Iliad (Montana, United States) (search for this): book 3, section 391b
And how he was disobedient to the
river,Scamander. Iliad 21.130-132. who was a god
and was ready to fight with him, and again that he said of the locks of his
hair, consecrated to her river Spercheius: ‘This let me give to take with him my hair to the hero, words are innocent enough. who was a
dead body, and that he did so we must believe. And again the trailings
Iliad
xxiv. 14 ff. of Hector's body round the grave of Patroclus and the
slaughter
Iliad
xxiv. 14 ff. of Hector's body round the grave of Patroclus and the
slaughter
Iliad
xxiii. 175-176. of the living captives upon his pyre,
all these we will affirm to be lies