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Seneca The Younger Inspirational Quotes (670)
Page 11 of 28
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To strive with an equal is dangerous with a superior, mad with an inferior, degrading.
Seneca the Younger
He who has great power should use it lightly.
Seneca the Younger
Genius has never been accepted without a measure of condonement.
Seneca the Younger
Other men's sins are before our eyes our own are behind our backs.
Seneca the Younger
We ought to take outdoor walks, to refresh and raise our spirits by deep breathing in the open air.
Seneca the Younger
Familiarity reduces the greatness of things.
Seneca the Younger
There is no fair wind for one who knows not whither he is bound.
Seneca the Younger
Know thyself this is the great object.
Seneca the Younger
That which Fortune has not given, she cannot take away.
Seneca the Younger
Principles are like seeds they are little things which do much good, if the mind that receives them has the right attitudes.
Seneca the Younger
Some cures are worse than the dangers they combat.
Seneca the Younger
A crowd of fellow-sufferers is a miserable kind of comfort.
Seneca the Younger
While we wait for life, life passes
Seneca the Younger
Constant exposure to dangers will breed contempt for them.
Seneca the Younger
Many men provoke others to overreach them by excessive suspicion their extraordinary distrust in some sort justifies the deceit.
Seneca the Younger
Great grief does not of itself put an end to itself.
Seneca the Younger
All things are cause for either laughter or weeping.
Seneca the Younger
Every one has time if he likes. Business runs after nobody: people cling to it of their own free will and think that to be busy is a proof of happiness.
Seneca the Younger
Life, if thou knowest how to use it, is long enough.
Seneca the Younger
A great step toward independence is a good-humoured stomach.
Seneca the Younger
Crime when it succeeds is called virtue.
Seneca the Younger
I will have a care of being a slave to myself, for it is a perpetual, a shameful, and the heaviest of all servitudes and this may be done by moderate desires.
Seneca the Younger
There in no one more unfortunate than the man who has never been unfortunate. for it has never been in his power to try himself.
Seneca the Younger
However wretched a fellow-mortal may be, he is still a member of our common species.
Seneca the Younger
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