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[14] Heraclitus the Ephesian 1 also agrees with this, when he reminds us that the weak and cowardly have sometimes, through the mutability of fortune, been victorious over eminent men; but that the most conspicuous praise is won, [p. 183] when high-placed power sending, as it were, under the yoke the inclination to harm, to be angry, and to show cruelty, on the citadel of a spirit victorious over itself has raised a glorious trophy.

1 “The weeping philosopher,” as Democritus was “the laughing philosopher”; cf. Juvenal, x. 33 ff. He flourished about 535-475 B.C.

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