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In words are seen the state of mind and character and disposition of the speaker.
Plutarch
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Plutarch
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Plutarchus
Lucius Mestrius Plutarchus
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Pseudo-Plutarch
Plutarch of Chaeronea
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More quotes by Plutarch
A prating barber asked Archelaus how he would be trimmed. He answered, In silence.
Plutarch
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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Julius Caesar divorced his wife Pompeia, but declared at the trial that he knew nothing of what was alleged against her and Clodius. When asked why, in that case, he had divorced her, he replied: Because I would have the chastity of my wife clear even of suspicion.
Plutarch
Demosthenes, when taunted by Pytheas that all his arguments smelled of the lamp, replied, Yes, but your lamp and mine, my friend, do not witness the same labours.
Plutarch
Reason speaks and feeling bites
Plutarch
To be ignorant of the lives of the most celebrated men of antiquity is to continue in a state of childhood all our days.
Plutarch
So very difficult a matter is it to trace and find out the truth of anything by history.
Plutarch
Let us carefully observe those good qualities wherein our enemies excel us and endeavor to excel them, by avoiding what is faulty, and imitating what is excellent in them.
Plutarch
Fortune had favoured me in this war that I feared, the rather, that some tempest would follow so favourable a gale.
Plutarch
Nothing exists in the intellect that has not first gone through the senses.
Plutarch
Come back with your shield - or on it
Plutarch
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.
Plutarch
Alexander wept when he heard from Anaxarchus that there was an infinite number of worlds and his friends asking him if any accident had befallen him, he returns this answer: Do you not think it a matter worthy of lamentation that when there is such a vast multitude of them, we have not yet conquered one?
Plutarch
Abstruse questions must have abstruse answers.
Plutarch
Anger turns the mind out of doors and bolts the entrance.
Plutarch
Time is the wisest of all counselors.
Plutarch
To conduct great matters and never commit a fault is above the force of human nature.
Plutarch
So long as he was personally present, [Alcibiades] had the perfect mastery of his political adversaries calumny only succeeded in his absence.
Plutarch
What can they suffer that do not fear to die?
Plutarch
Courage consists not in hazarding without fear but being resolutely minded in a just cause.
Plutarch