Index: binaries/data/mods/public/gui/text/quotes.txt =================================================================== --- binaries/data/mods/public/gui/text/quotes.txt +++ binaries/data/mods/public/gui/text/quotes.txt @@ -135,7 +135,6 @@ “When you realize the power of Athens, consider it was won by valiant men who knew their duty, had a sense of dishonor in fight and, if their enterprises failed, would rather give their lives than lack in civic virtue.” \n— Pericles in his Funeral Oration for Athenians that died in the first year of the war (Thucydides, “History of the Peloponnesian War”, II. 43.2) “To heroes all earth is their tomb, and their virtues are remembered far from home where an epitaph declares them, in an unwritten record of the mind that will outlast any monument.” \n— Pericles in his Funeral Oration for Athenians that died in the first year of the war (Thucydides, “History of the Peloponnesian War”, II. 43.3) “Understand that happiness depends on freedom, and freedom depends on courage.” \n— Pericles in his Funeral Oration for Athenians that died in the first year of the war (Thucydides, “History of the Peloponnesian War”, II. 43.4) -“The greatest glory for women is to be least talked about by men, whether for good or ill.” \n— Pericles in his Funeral Oration for Athenians that died in the first year of the war (Thucydides, “History of the Peloponnesian War”, II. 45.2) “Wait for the wisest of all counsellors, time.” \n— Pericles, a cautious politician who avoided war (Plutarch, “Parallel Lives”, “Pericles”, sec. 18) “Your empire is now like a tyranny: it may have been wrong to take it; it is certainly dangerous to let it go.” \n— Pericles, addressing the Athenian assembly after a plague had weakened the city (Thucydides, “History of the Peloponnesian War”, II. 63.3) “War is sweet to those who have no experience of it, but the experienced man fears its approach in his heart.” \n— Pindar (fragment 110)