<GetPassage xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns="http://chs.harvard.edu/xmlns/cts">
            <request>
                <requestName>GetPassage</requestName>
                <requestUrn>urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0059.tlg007.perseus-eng2:220</requestUrn>
            </request>
            <reply>
                <urn>urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0059.tlg007.perseus-eng2:220</urn>
                <passage>
                    <TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><text xml:lang="eng"><body><div type="translation" n="urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0059.tlg007.perseus-eng2" xml:lang="eng"><div type="textpart" subtype="section" resp="perseus" n="220"><milestone unit="page" resp="Stephanus" n="220"/><milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="220a"/><p><said who="#Stranger"><label>Str.</label> Of course they exist.  And we must pass over the hunting of lifeless things, which has no name, with the exception of some kinds of diving and the like, which are of little importance;  but the hunting of living things we will call animal-hunting.</said></p><p><said who="#Theaetetus"><label>Theaet.</label> Very well.</said></p><p><said who="#Stranger"><label>Str.</label> And two classes of animal-hunting might properly be made, one (and this is divided under many classes and names) the hunting of creatures that go on their feet, land-animal hunting, and the other that of swimming creatures, to be called, as a whole, water-animal hunting?</said></p><p><said who="#Theaetetus"><label>Theaet.</label> Certainly.</said></p><milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="220b"/><p><said who="#Stranger"><label>Str.</label> And of swimming creatures we see that one tribe is winged and the other is in the water?</said></p><p><said who="#Theaetetus"><label>Theaet.</label> Of course.</said></p><p><said who="#Stranger"><label>Str.</label> And the hunting of winged creatures is called, as a whole, fowling.</said></p><p><said who="#Theaetetus"><label>Theaet.</label> It is.</said></p><p><said who="#Stranger"><label>Str.</label> And the hunting of water creatures goes by the general name of fishing.</said></p><p><said who="#Theaetetus"><label>Theaet.</label> Yes.</said></p><p><said who="#Stranger"><label>Str.</label> And might I not divide this kind of hunting into two principal divisions?</said></p><p><said who="#Theaetetus"><label>Theaet.</label> What divisions?</said></p><p><said who="#Stranger"><label>Str.</label> The one carries on the hunt by means of enclosures merely, the other by a blow.</said></p><p><said who="#Theaetetus"><label>Theaet.</label> What do you mean, and how do you distinguish the two?</said></p><p><said who="#Stranger"><label>Str.</label> As regards the first, because whatever surrounds anything and encloses it
<milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="220c"/>so as to constrain it is properly called an enclosure.</said></p><p><said who="#Theaetetus"><label>Theaet.</label> Certainly.</said></p><p><said who="#Stranger"><label>Str.</label> May not, then, wicker baskets and seines and snares and nets and the like be called enclosures?</said></p><p><said who="#Theaetetus"><label>Theaet.</label> Assuredly.</said></p><p><said who="#Stranger"><label>Str.</label> Then we will call this division hunting by enclosures, or something of that sort.</said></p><p><said who="#Theaetetus"><label>Theaet.</label> Yes.</said></p><p><said who="#Stranger"><label>Str.</label> And the other, which is done with a blow, by means of hooks and three pronged spears, we must now—to name it with a single word—
<milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="220d"/>call striking; or could a better name be found, Theaetetus?</said></p><p><said who="#Theaetetus"><label>Theaet.</label> Never mind the name;  that will do well enough.</said></p><p><said who="#Stranger"><label>Str.</label> Then the kind of striking which takes place at night by the light of a fire is, I suppose, called by the hunters themselves fire-hunting.</said></p><p><said who="#Theaetetus"><label>Theaet.</label> To be sure.</said></p><p><said who="#Stranger"><label>Str.</label> And that which belongs to the daytime is, as a whole, barb-hunting, since the spears, as well as the hooks, are tipped with barbs.</said></p><milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="220e"/><p><said who="#Theaetetus"><label>Theaet.</label> Yes, it is so called.</said></p><p><said who="#Stranger"><label>Str.</label> Then of striking which belongs to barb-hunting, that part which proceeds downward from above, is called, because tridents are chiefly used in it, tridentry, I suppose.</said></p><p><said who="#Theaetetus"><label>Theaet.</label> Yes, some people, at any rate, call it so.</said></p><p><said who="#Stranger"><label>Str.</label> Then there still remains, I may say, only one further kind.</said></p><p><said who="#Theaetetus"><label>Theaet.</label> What is that?</said></p></div></div></body></text></TEI>
                </passage>
            </reply>
            </GetPassage>