Soctrates - amoung his peers

The DREAM


kinder to animals and to unfortunate ones -  grazebook

At best we can build houses more durable than the bee

Hope you would continue until the morning that I might
quote your own words agaist you - p19

You - as far as the appearance go - and we have little else to rely on- you are a good ,man - p21

Justice is also a necesity to man - p23

must be accepted to the Gods of the place

and we went on to say that through this gateway neither Time nor Space could come
in or go out, but only souls, such as his own - p34

Soul in astral harmony 

Some souls as these, he said, were tinted and dyed with the desires of their lost bodies

Life or consciounsness persisted after the body has perished - p41

Things not understood were the future. - p45


he could find no differences between the souls of Greeks or Barbarians, nor were the souls of 
slaves different in any respect from the sould of the free men. p47

to soften or losen the bonds wich naturally bind men to this mortal life of ours. p47

He began to realsise how much he was eaten up with desire to become one with the Light. p53

I am content to believe that what happened to one man may equlay well happen to another p59

Now I can not longer think that the mountain of heaven is either Here and There, Now and Then,
and however high we may fly into air.

ethernity has allways seemed both HEre and Now (present Belongs to Ethernity)  p61


The VERDICT
--------------------

I have lived too long in this city to believe in anything - p67

seriuos accusations were not supported by evidence that was conclusive

redeem a man's reputation by mentioning the company he keeps

but Socrates might have read this stuff and allowed it to ferment in his brain - p95

Therir existence mattered one way or another - p96

He had accused Socrates of breeding impiety and suggesting false ideas of religion and the Gods - p97

we cannot punish people for catching fever - p99

Now men become nuisances to the governors, not only by intriguing with foreign governments, or by 
attempting to change the constitution, but in a simpler way of continuing to ask awkward questions in ublic.

of those other little-minded persons who believe Gods can be interested in the details of existence - p109

for he (Socrates) was definitelly a genuine believer in the Divine, 
but eqully definitely not, in the Gods as they generally represented
to us - p111

remarkable that his disciples were notoriously indiferent to money

Socrates has antagonized those whose livelihood depend on the religion of our lady - p116

The priests were agaist Socrates, not because amusing remarks about the priesthood, p117

The worst of your rich men is that you become distorted, and a view everything
 in relation to wealth - p119


The city of God

DEmocracy, is sometimes far more unpleasant for democtas than a tyrany - for that
at least can be temperd by assasination - and you can only temper Democracy with pestilense.

is fear of poverty that freezes the soul 

but unless we have seen other cities, we cannot adequtelly love our own home

though nothing could equal the glitter of this fair country

it is dificult to speak before strangers

Soul of the child does not suffer any permament harm in the process of education -n p163

The search for hidden knowledge is dangerous and leads to death - p164

The wil of GOD is the common law - p166



