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Learn to be pleased with everything...because it could always be worse, but isn't!
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
Phocion compared the speeches of Leosthenes to cypress-trees. They are tall, said he, and comely, but bear no fruit.
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As in the case of painters, who have undertaken to give us a beautiful and graceful figure, which may have some slight blemishes, we do not wish then to pass over such blemishes altogether, nor yet to mark them too prominently. The one would spoil the beauty, and the other destroy the likeness of the picture.
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Wickedness frames the engines of her own torment. She is a wonderful artisan of a miserable life.
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When the candles are out all women are fair.
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It is a hard matter, my fellow citizens, to argue with the belly, since it has no ears.
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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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Medicine to produce health must examine disease and music, to create harmony must investigate discord.
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Custom is almost a second nature.
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Socrates said he was not an Athenian or a Greek, but a citizen of the world.
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Authority and place demonstrate and try the tempers of men, by moving every passion and discovering every frailty.
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Of all the disorders in the soul, envy is the only one no one confesses to.
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Pittacus said, Every one of you hath his particular plague, and my wife is mine and he is very happy who hath this only.
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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.
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Prosperity has this property, it puffs up narrow Souls, makes them imagine themselves high and mighty, and look down upon the World with Contempt but a truly noble and resolved Spirit appears greatest in Distress, and then becomes more bright and conspicuous.
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Character is simply habit long continued.
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The very spring and root of honesty and virtue lie in good education.
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The real destroyer of the liberties of the people is he who spreads among them bounties, donations and benefits.
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Silence is an answer to a wise man.
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Foreign lady once remarked to the wife of a Spartan commander that the women of Sparta were the only women in the world who could rule men. We are the only women who raise men, the Spartan lady replied.
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When Eudæmonidas heard a philosopher arguing that only a wise man can be a good general, This is a wonderful speech, said he but he that saith it never heard the sound of trumpets.
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