Audiobook: Our Young Folks' Plutarch
- Download Preface audio
- Download Theseus audio
- Download Lycurgus audio
- Download Romulus audio
- Download Numa Pompilius audio
- Download Solon audio
- Download Publicola audio
- Download Caius Marcius Coriolanus audio
- Download Themistocles audio
- Download Aristides audio
- Download Cimon audio
- Download Pericles audio
- Download Nicias audio
- Download Alcibiades audio
- Download Lysander audio
- Download Camillus audio
- Download Artaxerxes audio
- Download Agesilaus audio
- Download Dion audio
- Download Phocion audio
- Download Pelopidas audio
- Download Timoleon audio
- Download Demosthenes audio
- Download Alexander audio
- Download Eumenes audio
- Download Demetrius audio
- Download Pyrrhus audio
- Download Aratus audio
- Download Agis audio
- Download Cleomenes audio
- Download Fabius audio
- Download Marcellus audio
- Download Philopoemen audio
- Download Flamininus audio
- Download Marcus Cato audio
- Download Aemilius Paulus audio
- Download Tiberius Gracchus audio
- Download Caius Gracchus audio
- Download Caius Marius audio
- Download Sylla audio
- Download Crassus audio
- Download Lucullus audio
- Download Pompey audio
- Download Cicero audio
- Download Caesar audio
- Download Cato The Younger audio
- Download Marcus Brutus audio
- Download Antony audio
- Download Sertorius audio
- Download Galba audio
- Download Otho audio
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Plutarch's Lives is a series of fifty biographies of famous Greek and Roman men written around 100 AD. In Our Young Folks' Plutarch, Rosalie Kaufman has adapted these biographies for young readers. In the preface she writes, โThe lives which we here present in a condensed simple form are prepared from those of Plutarch. Plutarch says, โIt must be borne in mind that my design is not to write histories, but lives.โ This is why anecdotes, short sayings or a word or two of repartee are frequently recorded. For they furnish a better insight into the thoughts and character of a man than his most glorious exploit, famous siege, or bloody battle. So it is lives, and not a history, that we offer; this must be borne in mind when some of the most important events the world has ever known receive insufficient mention.โ
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