Matthew Lewellyn

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When Socrates heard this he laughed quietly and said: “Really, Simmias, it would be hard for me to persuade other people that I do [e] not consider my present fate a misfortune if I cannot persuade even you, and you are afraid that it is more difficult to deal with me than before. You seem to think me inferior to the swans in prophecy. They sing before too, but when they realize that they must die they sing most and most beautifully, as they rejoice that they are about to depart to [85] join the god whose servants they are. But men, because of their own fear of death, tell lies about the swans ...more
Plato: Five Dialogues: Euthyphro, Apology, Crito, Meno, Phaedo
by Plato
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