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Nothing is cheap which is superfluous, for what one does not need, is dear at a penny.
Plutarch
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Plutarch
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Lucius Mestrius Plutarchus
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More quotes by Plutarch
Nothing exists in the intellect that has not first gone through the senses.
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Good fortune will elevate even petty minds, and give them the appearance of a certain greatness and stateliness, as from their high place they look down upon the world but the truly noble and resolved spirit raises itself, and becomes more conspicuous in times of disaster and ill fortune.
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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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The man who is completely wise and virtuous has no need of glory, except so far as it disposes and eases his way to action by the greater trust that it procures him.
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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.
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Grief is natural the absence of all feeling is undesirable, but moderation in grief should be observed, as in the face of all good or evil.
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The present offers itself to our touch for only an instant of time and then eludes the senses.
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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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Choose what is best, and habit will make it pleasant and easy.
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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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The Epicureans, according to whom animals had no creation, doe suppose that by mutation of one into another, they were first made for they are the substantial part of the world like as Anaxagoras and Euripides affirme in these tearmes: nothing dieth, but in changing as they doe one for another they show sundry formes.
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That we may consult concerning others, and not others concerning us.
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Know how to listen, and you will profit even from those who talk badly.
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Socrates said he was not an Athenian or a Greek, but a citizen of the world.
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A healer of others, himself diseased.
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To the Greeks, the supreme function of music was to praise the gods and educate the youth. In Egypt... Initiatory music was heard only in Temple rites because it carried the vibratory rhythms of other worlds and of a life beyond the mortal.
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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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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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King Agis said, The Lacedæmonians are not wont to ask how many, but where the enemy are.
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He is a fool who lets slip a bird in the hand for a bird in the bush.
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