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antisthenes_of_athens:aesop_fables_21_gibbs

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antisthenes_of_athens:aesop_fables_21_gibbs [2014/01/14 23:20] – external edit 127.0.0.1antisthenes_of_athens:aesop_fables_21_gibbs [2014/03/02 13:53] (current) frank
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 //Note:// The bon mot attributed here to Antisthenes was apparently so well known that Aristotle only needed to allude to the lions' words, presumably something like: 'You speak well, hares, but where are your teeth and claws?' Antisthenes (d. 365 B.C.E.) was a philosopher associated with the 'Cynic' school. //Note:// The bon mot attributed here to Antisthenes was apparently so well known that Aristotle only needed to allude to the lions' words, presumably something like: 'You speak well, hares, but where are your teeth and claws?' Antisthenes (d. 365 B.C.E.) was a philosopher associated with the 'Cynic' school.
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 +Source: Aesop's Fables. Translations by George Fyler Townsend published by G. Routledge and Sons. 1867.\\ 
 [[http://mythfolklore.net/aesopica/oxford/21.htm|Source]]</blockquote> [[http://mythfolklore.net/aesopica/oxford/21.htm|Source]]</blockquote>
  
antisthenes_of_athens/aesop_fables_21_gibbs.1389763241.txt.gz · Last modified: 2014/03/02 13:53 (external edit)

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