| The first excerpt represents the past or something you must release, and is drawn from Eryxias by Platonic Imitator: cannot be at one time useful and at another time not, in the same process.
CRITIAS: But in that respect your argument and mine are the same. For you
maintain if they are useful to a certain end, they can never become
useless; whereas I say that in order to accomplish some results bad things
are needed, and good for others.
SOCRATES: But can a bad thing be used to carry out a good purpose?
CRITIAS: I should say not.
SOCRATES: And we call those actions good which a man does for the sake of
virtue?
CRITIAS: Yes.
SOCRATES: But can a man learn any kind of knowledge which is imparted by
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The second excerpt represents the present or the deciding factor of the moment, and is drawn from Twilight Land by Howard Pyle: with the beating that he had suffered. All that night he
continued to weep and wail, and when the morning had come he was
weeping and wailing still.
Now it chanced that a wise man passed that way, and hearing his
lamentation, stopped to inquire the cause of his trouble.
Abdallah told the other of his sorrow, and the wise man listened,
smiling, till he was done, and then he laughed outright. "My
son," said he, "if every one in your case should shed tears as
abundantly as you have done, the world would have been drowned in
salt water by this time. As for your friend, think not ill of
him; no man loveth another who is always giving."
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The third excerpt represents the future or something you must embrace, and is drawn from Ursula by Honore de Balzac: Bouvard returned at once and took him into the bedroom, where he saw
the mysterious Swedenborgian, and also a woman sitting in an armchair.
The woman did not rise, and seemed not to notice the entrance of the
two old men.
"What! no tub?" cried Minoret, smiling.
"Nothing but the power of God," answered the Swedenborgian gravely. He
seemed to Minoret to be about fifty years of age.
The three men sat down and the mysterious stranger talked of the rain
and the coming fine weather, to the great astonishment of Minoret, who
thought he was being hoaxed. The Swedenborgian soon began, however, to
question his visitor on his scientific opinions, and seemed evidently
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