Plutarch's Morals: Ethical EssaysGeorge Bell and Sons, 1888 - 408 sider |
Inni boken
Resultat 1-5 av 39
Side 13
... censure are far more useful than abuse to the freeborn , praise pricking them on to virtue , censure deter- ring them from vice . But one must censure and praise alternately when they are too saucy we must censure them and make them ...
... censure are far more useful than abuse to the freeborn , praise pricking them on to virtue , censure deter- ring them from vice . But one must censure and praise alternately when they are too saucy we must censure them and make them ...
Side 17
... censured the introducers of bad habits , who have set over boys tutors and preceptors , but have given to youths full liberty , when they ought , on the contrary , to have watched and guarded them more than boys . For who does not know ...
... censured the introducers of bad habits , who have set over boys tutors and preceptors , but have given to youths full liberty , when they ought , on the contrary , to have watched and guarded them more than boys . For who does not know ...
Side 20
... censure by mildness ; and sometimes relax and slacken the reins of their sons ' desires , and again tighten them ; and must be especially easy in respect to their faults , or if they are angry must soon cool down . For it is better for ...
... censure by mildness ; and sometimes relax and slacken the reins of their sons ' desires , and again tighten them ; and must be especially easy in respect to their faults , or if they are angry must soon cool down . For it is better for ...
Side 21
... censure their sons ' faults while they themselves commit the same , are really their own accusers , if they know it not , under their sons ' name ; and those who live a depraved life have no right to censure their slaves , far less ...
... censure their sons ' faults while they themselves commit the same , are really their own accusers , if they know it not , under their sons ' name ; and those who live a depraved life have no right to censure their slaves , far less ...
Side 51
... censured boy - loves , from that time forward they preferred that kind of love to the normal love . Aristotle gives a slightly different account , namely , that this Cleomachus came not from Thessaly , but from Chalcis in Thrace , to ...
... censured boy - loves , from that time forward they preferred that kind of love to the normal love . Aristotle gives a slightly different account , namely , that this Cleomachus came not from Thessaly , but from Chalcis in Thrace , to ...
Andre utgaver - Vis alle
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
Adagia admire altogether anger answer Anthemion Aphrodite asked Athenians Athens beautiful better body borrow boys called censure character colours Compare deity Demosthenes desire Diogenes Dionysius disease disgraceful Edition enemies envy Epaminondas Euripides exile eyes father fault favour fear flatterer fortune Fragm freedom of speech friends friendship give glory gods Greeks grief habit hand hate hear Hercher Herodotus Hesiod History Homer honour husband Iliad judgement kind king Lacedæmonians live look lovers marriage matter Memoir mind nature noble Notes Odyssey one's ourselves pain passion Pausanias person philosophers Phocion Pindar Pisias Plato pleasure Plutarch poet Portrait praise progress in virtue punishment Reading reason rebuke Reiske replied rich seems silent slaves Socrates Sophocles soul speak Stilpo talk Themistocles Thespesius things Thucydides tion Trans trouble vexed vice vols whereas wife wish woman women Woodcuts words Wyttenbach Xenocrates young Zeus Zeuxippus