====== Plutarch ====== Lives * [[text:Theseus]] * [[text:Romulus]] * [[text:Comparison of Romulus and Theseus]] * [[text:Lycurgus]] * [[text:Numa Pompilius]] * [[text:Comparison of Numa with Lycurgus]] * [[text:Solon]] * [[text:Popicola]] * [[text:Comparison of Popicola with Solon]] * [[text:Themistocles]] * [[text:Camillus]] * [[text:Pericles]] * [[text:Fabius]] * [[text:Comparison of Pericles with Fabius]] * [[text:Alcibiades]] * [[text:Coriolanus]] * [[text:Comparison of Alcibiades with Coriolanus]] * [[text:Timoleon]] * [[text:Aemilius Paulus]] * [[text:Comparison of Timoleon with Aemilius Paulus]] * [[text:Pelopidas]] * [[text:Marcellus]] * [[text:Comparison of Pelopidas with Marcellus]] * [[text:Aristides]] * [[text:Marcus Cato]] * [[text:Comparison of Aristides with Marcus Cato]] * [[text:Philopoemen]] * [[text:Flamininus]] * [[text:Comparison of Philopoemen with Flamininus]] * [[text:Pyrrhus]] * [[text:Caius Marius]] * [[text:Lysander]] * [[text:Sylla]] * [[text:Comparison of Lysander with Sylla]] * [[text:Cimon]] * [[text:Lucullus]] * [[text:Comparison of Lucullus with Cimon]] * [[text:Nicias]] * [[text:Crassus]] * [[text:Comparison of Crassus with Nicias]] * [[text:Sertorius]] * [[text:Eumenes]] * [[text:Comparison of Sertorius with Eumenes]] * [[text:AgesilausPlutarch|Agesilaus]] * [[text:Pompey]] * [[text:Comparison of Pompey to Agesilaus]] * [[text:AlexanderPlutarch|Alexander]] * [[text:Caesar]] * [[text:Phocion]] * [[text:Cato the Younger]] * [[text:Agis]] * [[text:Cleomenes]] * [[text:Tiberius Gracchus]] * [[text:Cauis Gracchus]] * [[text:Comparison of Tiberius and Cauis Gracchus with Agis and Cleomenes]] * [[text:Demosthenes]] * [[text:Cicero]] * [[text:Comparison of Demosthenes and Cicero]] * [[text:Demetrius]] * [[text:Antony]] * [[text:Comparison of Demetrius and Antony]] * [[text:Dion]] * [[text:Marcus Brutus]] * [[text:Comparison of Dion and Brutus]] * [[text:Aratus]] * [[text:Artaxerxes]] * [[text:Galba]] * [[text:Otho]] Moralia * [[text:A Discourse Touching the Training of Children]] * [[text:Concerning the Cure of Anger. a Dialogue]] * [[text:Of Bashfulness]] * [[text:That Virtue May Be Taught]] * [[text:The Account of the Laws and Customs of the Lacedaemonians]] * [[text:Concerning Music]] * [[text:Of the Tranquillity of the Mind]] * [[text:Of Superstition]] * [[text:The Apophthegms Or Remarkable Sayings of Kings and Great Commanders]] * [[text:Roman Apophthegms]] * [[text:Plutarch’s Rules For the Preservation of Health. a Dialogue]] * [[text:How a Man May Receive Advantage and Profit From His Enemies]] * [[text:Consolation to Apollonius]] * [[text:Concerning the Virtues of Women]] * [[text:Laconic Apophthegms Or Remarkable Sayings of the Spartans]] * [[text:The Remarkable Speeches of Some Obscure Men Amongst the Spartans]] * [[text:Of Hearing]] * [[text:Of Large Acquaintance Or, an Essay to Prove the Folly of Seeking Many Friends]] * [[text:The First Oration of Plutarch Concerning the Fortune Or Virtue of Alexander the Great]] * [[text:The Second Oration of Plutarch Concerning the Fortune Or Virtue of Alexander the Great]] * [[text:The Banquet of the Seven Wise Men]] * [[text:How a Young Man Ought to Hear Poems]] * [[text:Of Envy and Hatred]] * [[text:How to Know a Flatterer From a Friend]] * [[text:That It Is Not Possible to Live Pleasurably According to the Doctrine of Epicurus]] * [[text:Roman Questions]] * [[text:Greek Questions]] * [[text:Of the Love of Wealth]] * [[text:How a Man May Inoffensively Praise Himself Without Being Liable to Envy]] * [[text:Concerning the Procreation of the Soul As Discoursed In Timaeus]] * [[text:That a Philosopher Ought Chiefly to Converse With Great Men]] * [[text:A Discourse Concerning Socrates’s Daemon]] * [[text:Of Curiosity, Or an Over-busy Inquisitiveness Into Things Impertinent]] * [[text:How a Man May Be Sensible of His Progress In Virtue]] * [[text:Of Fortune]] * [[text:Of Virtue and Vice]] * [[text:Conjugal Precepts]] * [[text:Whether ’twere Rightly Said, Live Concealed]] * [[text:An Abstract of a Comparison Betwixt Aristophanes and Menander]] * [[text:Of Banishment, Or Flying One’s Country]] * [[text:Of Brotherly Love]] * [[text:Wherefore the Pythian Priestess Now Ceases to Deliver Her Oracles In Verse]] * [[text:Of Those Sentiments Concerning Nature With Which Philosophers Were Delighted]] * [[text:A Breviate of a Discourse, Showing That the Stoics Speak Greater Improbabilities Than the Poets]] * [[text:Plutarch’s Symposiacs Book 1]] * [[text:Plutarch’s Symposiacs Book 2]] * [[text:Plutarch’s Symposiacs Book 3]] * [[text:Plutarch’s Symposiacs Book 4]] * [[text:Plutarch’s Symposiacs Book 5]] * [[text:Plutarch’s Symposiacs Book 6]] * [[text:Plutarch’s Symposiacs Book 7]] * [[text:Plutarch’s Symposiacs Book 8]] * [[text:Plutarch’s Symposiacs Book 9]] * [[text:Of Moral Virtue]] * [[text:Plutarch’s Natural Questions]] * [[text:Why the Oracles Cease to Give Answers]] * [[text:Of Isis and Osiris, Or of the Ancient Religion and Philosophy of Egypt]] * [[text:Concerning Such Whom God Is Slow to Punish]] * [[text:Of Natural Affection Towards One’s Offspring]] * [[text:Concerning the Fortune of the Romans]] * [[text:Of Garrulity, Or Talkativeness, Of Love|Of Garrulity, Or Talkativeness]] * [[text:Of Love]] * [[text:Five Tragical Histories of Love]] * [[text:A Discourse to an Unlearned Prince]] * [[text:Of Herodotus’s Malice]] * [[text:Of Common Conceptions, Against the Stoics]] * [[text:The Contradictions of the Stoics]] * [[text:Of the Word Ei Engraven Over the Gate of Apollo’s Temple At Delphi]] * [[text:Whether Vice Is Sufficient to Render a Man Unhappy]] * [[text:Whether the Passions of the Soul Or Diseases of the Body Are Worse]] * [[text:Of Eating of Flesh]] * [[text:Lives of the Ten Orators]] * [[text:Whether an Aged Man Ought to Meddle In State Affairs]] * [[text:Decrees Proposed to the Athenians]] * [[text:Political Precepts.Which Are the Most Crafty|Political Precepts]] * [[text:Which are More Crafty, Water-animals Or Those Creatures That Breed Upon the Land?]] * [[text:That Brute Beasts Make Use of Reason]] * [[text:Of the Face Appearing Within the Orb of the Moon]] * [[text:Of Fate]] * [[text:Concerning the First Principle of Cold]] * [[text:Whether Water Or Fire Be Most Useful]] * [[text:Against Colotes, the Disciple and Favorite of Epicurus]] * [[text:Plutarch’s Consolatory Letter to His Wife]] * [[text:Of the Three Sorts of Government, Monarchy, Democracy, and Oligarchy]] * [[text:Whether the Athenians Were More Renowned For Their Warlike Achievements Or For Their Learning]] * [[text:Against Running In Debt, Or Taking Up Money Upon Usury]] * [[text:Plutarch’s Platonic Questions]] * [[text:Parallels, Or a Comparison Between the Greek and Roman Histories]] * [[text:Of the Names of Rivers and Mountains, and of Such Things As Are to Be Found Therein]]