"And, in short, there is no pretext
you do not allege and there is nothing you shrink from saying to justify you in not rejecting any who are in the bloom of their prime." "If it is your pleasure," he said, "to take me as your example of this trait in lovers, I admit it for the sake of the argument." "Again," said I, "do you not observe the same thing in the lovers of wine?*Cf. Aristotle Eth. i. 8. 10 ἑκάστῳ δ’ ἐστὶν ἡδὺ πρὸς ὃ λέγεται φιλοτοιοῦτος. Cf. the old Latin hexameters—
"Whom do you mean, then, by the true philosophers?" "Those for whom the truth is the spectacle of which they are enamored,*Cf. Aristotle Eth. 1098 a 32 θεατὴς γὰρ τἀληθοῦς." said I. "Right again,*Cf. 449 C." said he; "but in what sense do you mean it?" "It would be by no means easy to explain it to another," I said, "but I think that you will grant me this." "What?" "That since the fair and honorable is the opposite of the base and ugly, they are two."