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Fate, however, is to all appearance more unavoidable than unexpected.
Plutarch
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Plutarch
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Plutarchus
Lucius Mestrius Plutarchus
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Pseudo-Plutarchus
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Plutarch of Chaeronea
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More quotes by Plutarch
What All The World Knows Water is the principle, or the element, of things. All things are water.
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To conduct great matters and never commit a fault is above the force of human nature.
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Wickedness is a wonderfully diligent architect of misery, of shame, accompanied with terror, and commotion, and remorse, and endless perturbation.
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Courage consists not in hazarding without fear but being resolutely minded in a just cause.
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Anger turns the mind out of doors and bolts the entrance.
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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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Oh, what a world full of pain we create, for a little taste upon the tongue.
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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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Come back with your shield - or on it
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If I were not Alexander, I would be Diogenes.
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Whenever anything is spoken against you that is not true, do not pass by or despise it because it is false but forthwith examine yourself, and consider what you have said or done that may administer a just occasion of reproof.
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Either is both, and Both is neither.
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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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Children ought to be led to honorable practices by means of encouragement and reasoning, and most certainly not by blows and ill treatment.
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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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It is the usual consolation of the envious, if they cannot maintain their superiority, to represent those by whom they are surpassed as inferior to some one else.
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That proverbial saying, Ill news goes quick and far.
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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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We rich men count our felicity and happiness to lie in these superfluities, and not in those necessary things.
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Courage stands halfway between cowardice and rashness, one of which is a lack, the other an excess of courage.
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