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Beauty is the flower of virtue.
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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Beauty
More quotes by Plutarch
That proverbial saying, Ill news goes quick and far.
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Zeno first started that doctrine, that knavery is the best defence against a knave.
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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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Vos vestros servate, meos mihi linquite mores You keep to your own ways, and leave mine to me
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Alexander esteemed it more kingly to govern himself than to conquer his enemies.
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Medicine to produce health must examine disease and music, to create harmony must investigate discord.
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Talkativeness has another plague attached to it, even curiosity for praters wish to hear much that they may have much to say.
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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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So very difficult a matter is it to trace and find out the truth of anything by history.
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Learn to be pleased with everything, with wealth so far as it makes us beneficial to others with poverty, for not having much to care for and with obscurity, for being unenvied.
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The obligations of law and equity reach only to mankind but kindness and beneficence should be extended to the creatures of every species, and these will flow from the breast of a true man, as streams that issue from the living fountain.
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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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We rich men count our felicity and happiness to lie in these superfluities, and not in those necessary things.
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Epaminondas is reported wittily to have said of a good man that died about the time of the battle of Leuctra, How came he to have so much leisure as to die, when there was so much stirring?
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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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The richest soil, if uncultivated, produces the rankest weeds.
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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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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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Fate, however, is to all appearance more unavoidable than unexpected.
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If I were not Alexander, I would be Diogenes.
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