No More Learning

And itwould be no very easy matter entirely to justify Xenopbon from this spirit of Envy, when one reads the Fragment of a Letter which he wrote
to Escbines, in which he extreamly inveighs against Plato, and charges him with having corrupted the Philosophy of Socrates, by           that of Py thagoras, and makes the end of his going intoSicily tobetheEnjoyment oftheDelicaciesofDionyjius hisTable.