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Lysander said that the law spoke too softly to be heard in such a noise of war.
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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It is no disgrace not to be able to do everything but to undertake, or pretend to do, what you are not made for, is not only shameful, but extremely troublesome and vexatious.
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Grief is like a physical pain which must be allowed to subside somewhat on its own before medical treatment is applied.
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Painting is silent poetry.
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He who busies himself in mean occupations, produces in the very pains he takes about things of little or no use, an evidence against himself of his negligence and indisposition to what is really good
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It is not reasonable that he who does not shoot should hit the mark, nor that he who does not stand fast at his post should win the day, or that the helpless man should succeed or the coward prosper.
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Immoderate grief is selfish, harmful, brings no advantage to either the mourner or the mourned, and dishonors the dead.
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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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Demosthenes, when taunted by Pytheas that all his arguments smelled of the lamp, replied, Yes, but your lamp and mine, my friend, do not witness the same labours.
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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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Alexander wept when he heard from Anaxarchus that there was an infinite number of worlds and his friends asking him if any accident had befallen him, he returns this answer: Do you not think it a matter worthy of lamentation that when there is such a vast multitude of them, we have not yet conquered one?
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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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Character is long-standing habit.
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As Meander says, For our mind is God and as Heraclitus, Man's genius is a deity.
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The belly has no ears.
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Time which diminishes all things increases understanding for the aging.
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Abstruse questions must have abstruse answers.
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Learn to be pleased with everything...because it could always be worse, but isn't!
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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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That proverbial saying, Ill news goes quick and far.
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