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Vos vestros servate, meos mihi linquite mores You keep to your own ways, and leave mine to me
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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He who least likes courting favour, ought also least to think of resenting neglect to feel wounded at being refused a distinction can only arise from an overweening appetite to have it.
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Speech is like cloth of Arras opened and put abroad, whereby the imagery doth appear in figure whereas in thoughts they lie but as packs.
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It is circumstance and proper measure that give an action its character, and make it either good or bad.
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Nor let us part with justice, like a cheap and common thing, for a small and trifling price.
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Athenodorus says hydrophobia, or water-dread, was first discovered in the time of Asclepiades.
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When men are arrived at the goal, they should not turn back.
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Anger turns the mind out of doors and bolts the entrance.
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Hesiod might as well have kept his breath to cool his pottage.
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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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The drop hollows out the stone not by strength, but by constant falling.
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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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Medicine to produce health must examine disease and music, to create harmony must investigate discord.
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Instead of using medicine, better fast today.
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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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Let a prince be guarded with soldiers, attended by councillors, and shut up in forts yet if his thoughts disturb him, he is miserable.
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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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Man is neither by birth nor disposition a savage, nor of unsocial habits, but only becomes so by indulging in vices contrary to his nature.
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The richest soil, if uncultivated, produces the rankest weeds.
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Antagoras the poet was boiling a conger, and Antigonus, coming behind him as he was stirring his skillet, said, Do you think, Antagoras, that Homer boiled congers when he wrote the deeds of Agamemnon? Antagoras replied, Do you think, O king, that Agamemnon, when he did such exploits, was a peeping in his army to see who boiled congers?
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Extraordinary rains pretty generally fall after great battles.
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