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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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Plutarch of Chaeronea
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More quotes by Plutarch
Medicine to produce health must examine disease and music, to create harmony must investigate discord.
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Lysander, when Dionysius sent him two gowns, and bade him choose which he would carry to his daughter, said, She can choose best, and so took both away with him.
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So also it is good not always to make a friend of the person who is expert in twining himself around us but, after testing them, to attach ourselves to those who are worthy of our affection and likely to be serviceable to us.
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What can they suffer that do not fear to die?
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God alone is entirely exempt from all want of human virtues, that which needs least is the most absolute and divine.
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I had rather men should ask why my statue is not set up, than why it is.
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Cato used to assert that wise men profited more by fools than fools by wise men for that wise men avoided the faults of fools, but that fools would not imitate the good examples of wise men.
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He [Caesar] loved the treason, but hated the traitor.
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A Spartan woman, as she handed her son his shield, exhorted him saying, As a warrior of Sparta come back with your shield or on it.
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When malice is joined to envy, there is given forth poisonous and feculent matter, as ink from the cuttle-fish.
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There is no debt with so much prejudice put off as that of justice.
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Our senses through ignorance of Reality, falsely tell us that what appears to be, is. FEAR = False Evidence Appearing Real
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I confess myself the greatest coward in the world, for I dare not do an ill thing.
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Nothing is cheap which is superfluous, for what one does not need, is dear at a penny.
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For it was not so much that by means of words I came to a complete understanding of things, as that from things I somehow had an experience which enabled me to follow the meaning of words.
Plutarch
It were better to have no opinion of God at all than such a one as is unworthy of him for the one is only belief - the other contempt.
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Either is both, and Both is neither.
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Demosthenes told Phocion, The Athenians will kill you some day when they once are in a rage. And you, said he, if they are once in their senses.
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Caesar's wife should be above suspicion.
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Agesilaus being invited once to hear a man who admirably imitated the nightingale, he declined, saying he had heard the nightingale itself.
Plutarch