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The belly 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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Gluttony
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Ears
More quotes by Plutarch
As soft wax is apt to take the stamp of the seal, so are the minds of young children to receive the instruction imprinted on them.
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A soldier told Pelopidas, We are fallen among the enemies. Said he, How are we fallen among them more than they among us?
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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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Playing the Cretan with the Cretans (i.e. lying to liars).
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Foreign lady once remarked to the wife of a Spartan commander that the women of Sparta were the only women in the world who could rule men. We are the only women who raise men, the Spartan lady replied.
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Nothing exists in the intellect that has not first gone through the senses.
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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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Courage and wisdom are, indeed, rarities amongst men, but of all that is good, a just man it would seem is the most scarce.
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The usual disease of princes, grasping covetousness, had made them suspicious and quarrelsome neighbors.
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Dionysius the Elder, being asked whether he was at leisure, he replied, God forbid that it should ever befall me!
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The drop hollows out the stone not by strength, but by constant falling.
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Those who aim at great deeds must also suffer greatly.
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It is easy to utter what has been kept silent, but impossible to recall what has been uttered.
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Prosperity has this property, it puffs up narrow Souls, makes them imagine themselves high and mighty, and look down upon the World with Contempt but a truly noble and resolved Spirit appears greatest in Distress, and then becomes more bright and conspicuous.
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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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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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To Harmodius, descended from the ancient Harmodius, when he reviled Iphicrates [a shoemaker's son] for his mean birth, My nobility, said he, begins in me, but yours ends in you.
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Oh, what a world full of pain we create, for a little taste upon the tongue.
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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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It is no flattery to give a friend a due character for commendation is as much the duty of a friend as reprehension.
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