Plutarch's Morals: Ethical EssaysGeorge Bell and Sons, 1888 - 408 sider |
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... kind Arcisi- laus the philosopher was unto Apelles the painter , Plutark in his Morals will tell you . ' 991 In 1882 the Reverend C. W. King , Senior Fellow of Trinity College , Cambridge , translated the six " Theosophi- cal Essays ...
... kind Arcisi- laus the philosopher was unto Apelles the painter , Plutark in his Morals will tell you . ' 991 In 1882 the Reverend C. W. King , Senior Fellow of Trinity College , Cambridge , translated the six " Theosophi- cal Essays ...
Side 1
... kind of women , such as courtesans or mistresses : for those who either on the father or mother's side are ill - born have the disgrace of their origin all their life long irretrievably present with them , and offer a ready handle to ...
... kind of women , such as courtesans or mistresses : for those who either on the father or mother's side are ill - born have the disgrace of their origin all their life long irretrievably present with them , and offer a ready handle to ...
Side 4
... kind of women . First and foremost they must be Greeks in their habits . For just as it is necessary immediately after birth to shapen the limbs of children , so that they may grow straight and not crooked , so from the beginning must ...
... kind of women . First and foremost they must be Greeks in their habits . For just as it is necessary immediately after birth to shapen the limbs of children , so that they may grow straight and not crooked , so from the beginning must ...
Side 5
... kind of fables , that their souls may not in the very dawn of existence be full of folly or corruption . ' Phocylides the poet also seems to give admirable advice when he says , " We must teach good habits while the pupil is still a boy ...
... kind of fables , that their souls may not in the very dawn of existence be full of folly or corruption . ' Phocylides the poet also seems to give admirable advice when he says , " We must teach good habits while the pupil is still a boy ...
Side 11
... kind to our children , and not to treat our slaves badly ; and , what is of the greatest importance , to be neither over elated in pros- perity nor over depressed in adversity , ' nor to be dissolute in pleasures , nor fierce and ...
... kind to our children , and not to treat our slaves badly ; and , what is of the greatest importance , to be neither over elated in pros- perity nor over depressed in adversity , ' nor to be dissolute in pleasures , nor fierce and ...
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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