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Know how to listen, and you will profit even from those who talk badly.
Plutarch
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Plutarch
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Plutarchus
Lucius Mestrius Plutarchus
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Pseudo-Plutarchus
Pseudo-Plutarch
Plutarch of Chaeronea
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Listening
More quotes by Plutarch
So long as he was personally present, [Alcibiades] had the perfect mastery of his political adversaries calumny only succeeded in his absence.
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I see the cure is not worth the pain.
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When men are arrived at the goal, they should not turn back.
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Immoderate grief is selfish, harmful, brings no advantage to either the mourner or the mourned, and dishonors the dead.
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Nor let us part with justice, like a cheap and common thing, for a small and trifling price.
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Solon being asked, namely, what city was best to live in. That city, he replied, in which those who are not wronged, no less than those who are wronged, exert themselves to punish the wrongdoers.
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It is no flattery to give a friend a due character for commendation is as much the duty of a friend as reprehension.
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It is easy to utter what has been kept silent, but impossible to recall what has been uttered.
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Lycurgus the Lacedæmonian brought long hair into fashion among his countrymen, saying that it rendered those that were handsome more beautiful, and those that were deformed more terrible. To one that advised him to set up a democracy in Sparta, Pray, said Lycurgus, do you first set up a democracy in your own house.
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Socrates said he was not an Athenian or a Greek, but a citizen of the world.
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Had I a careful and pleasant companion that should show me my angry face in a glass, I should not at all take it ill to behold man's self so unnaturally disguised and dishonored will conduce not a little to the impeachment of anger.
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Prosperity is no just scale adversity is the only balance to weigh friends.
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Moral habits, induced by public practices, are far quicker in making their way into men's private lives, than the failings and faults of individuals are in infecting the city at large.
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Water continually dropping will wear hard rocks hollow.
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We ought to regard books as we do sweetmeats, not wholly to aim at the pleasantest, but chiefly to respect the wholesomest not forbidding either, but approving the latter most.
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It is no great wonder if in long process of time, while fortune takes her course hither and thither, numerous coincidences should spontaneously occur. If the number and variety of subjects to be wrought upon be infinite, it is all the more easy for fortune, with such an abundance of material, to effect this similarity of results.
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Character is simply habit long continued.
Plutarch
Zeno first started that doctrine, that knavery is the best defence against a knave.
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Time which diminishes all things increases understanding for the aging.
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As Meander says, For our mind is God and as Heraclitus, Man's genius is a deity.
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