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It is a difficult task, O citizens, to make speeches to the belly, which has no ears.
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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The giving of riches and honors to a wicked man is like giving strong wine to him that hath a fever.
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Where the lion's skin will not reach, you must patch it out with the fox's.
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Philosophy is the art of living.
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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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Nothing can produce so great a serenity of life as a mind free from guilt and kept untainted, not only from actions, but purposes that are wicked. By this means the soul will be not only unpolluted but also undisturbed. The fountain will run clear and unsullied.
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Character is simply habit long continued.
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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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Wickedness frames the engines of her own torment. She is a wonderful artisan of a miserable life.
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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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Abstruse questions must have abstruse answers.
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He who owns a hundred sheep must fight with fifty wolves
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The human heart becomes softened by hearing of instances of gentleness and consideration.
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Demosthenes told Phocion, The Athenians will kill you some day when they once are in a rage. And you, said he, if they are once in their senses.
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He (Cato) used to say that in all his life he never repented but of three things. The first was that he had trusted a woman with a secret the second that he had gone by sea when he might have gone by land and the third, that had passed one day without having a will by him.
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...To the Dolphin alone, beyond all other, nature has granted what the best philosophers seek: friendship for no advantage
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Themistocles being asked whether he would rather be Achilles or Homer, said, Which would you rather be, a conqueror in the Olympic games, or the crier that proclaims who are conquerors?
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He is a fool who leaves things close at hand to follow what is out of reach.
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Xenophon says that there is no sound more pleasing than one's own praises.
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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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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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