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Chapter 5

Word Count: 624    |    Released on: 18/11/2017

ly to lead his listeners onwards92 to the attainment of this virtue. "Sirs," he would say, "if a war came upon us and we wished to choose a man who would best help us to save

hat imputation.93 For with the incontinent man it is not as with the self-seeker and the covetous. These may at any rate be held to enrich themselves in depriving others. But the intemperate man cannot claim in like fashion to be a blessing to himself if a curse to his neighbours; nay, the mischief which he may cause to others is nothing by comparison with that which redounds against himself, since it is the height of mischief to ruin - I do not say one's own house and property - but one's own body and one's own soul. Or to take an example from social intercourse, no one cares for a guest who evidently takes more pleasure in the wine and the viands than in the friends beside him - who stints his com

er over the pleasures which flow from the body, but of those also which are fed by riches, his belief being that he who

beautiful and b

roub

ter himself beware lest he

. "Pyth." iv. 138; i

Econ." x. 1; "Cyrop." I. iv. 12; Plat. "Phaedr." 23

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