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What we achieve inwardly will change outer reality.
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
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.
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Valour, however unfortunate, commands great respect even from enemies: but the Romans despise cowardice, even though it be prosperous.
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Demosthenes overcame and rendered more distinct his inarticulate and stammering pronunciation by speaking with pebbles in his mouth.
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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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Either is both, and Both is neither.
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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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The belly has no ears.
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The saying of old Antigonus, who when he was to fight at Andros, and one told him, The enemy's ships are more than ours, replied, For how many then wilt thou reckon me?
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The very spring and root of honesty and virtue lie in good education.
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He who first called money the sinews of the state seems to have said this with special reference to war.
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When one told Plistarchus that a notorious railer spoke well of him, I'll lay my life, said he, somebody hath told him I am dead, for he can speak well of no man living.'
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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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Nature without learning is like a blind man learning without Nature, like a maimed one practice without both, incomplete. As in agriculture a good soil is first sought for, then a skilful husbandman, and then good seed in the same way nature corresponds to the soil, the teacher to the husbandman, precepts and instruction to the seed.
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I don't need a friend who changes when I change and who nods when I nod my shadow does that much better.
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Spintharus, speaking in commendation of Epaminondas, says he scarce ever met with any man who knew more and spoke less.
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For man is a plant, not fixed in the earth, nor immovable, but heavenly, whose head, rising as it were from a root upwards, is turned towards heaven.
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That proverbial saying, Ill news goes quick and far.
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Pythias once, scoffing at Demosthenes, said that his arguments smelt of the lamp.
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I have heard that Tiberius used to say that that man was ridiculous, who after sixth years, appealed to a physician.
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Mothers ought to bring up and nurse their own children for they bring them up with greater affection and with greater anxiety, as loving them from the heart, and so to speak, every inch of them.
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