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All fortune is good fortune for it either rewards, disciplines, amends, or punishes, and so is either useful or just.
Boethius
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Boethius
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The Eternal City
Anicus Manlius Severinus Boethius
Anicius Manlius Torquatus Severinus Boethius
d. 524 -- Translations into French Boethius
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More quotes by Boethius
Wretched men cringe before tyrants who have no power, the victims of their trivial hopes and fears. They do not realise that anger is hopeless, fear is pointless and desire all a delusion. He whose heart is fickle is not his own master, has thrown away his shield, deserted his post, and he forges the links of the chain that holds him.
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So nothing is ever good or bad unless you think it so, and vice versa. All luck is good luck to the man who bears it with equanimity.
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Whose happiness is so firmly established that he has no quarrel from any side with his estate of life?
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He who is virtuous is wise and he who is wise is good and he who is good is happy.
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He who has calmly reconciled his life to fate ... can look fortune in the face.
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The good is the end toward which all things tend.
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Give me Thy light, and fix my eyes on Thee!
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Music is part of us, and either ennobles or degrades our behavior.
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A person is an individual substance of a rational nature.
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If there is anything good about nobility it is that it enforces the necessity of avoiding degeneracy.
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Nothing is miserable but what is thought so, and contrariwise, every estate is happy if he that bears it be content.
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...Whose souls, albeit in a cloudy memory, yet seek back their good, but, like drunk men, know not the road home.
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One's virtue is all that one truly has, because it is not imperiled by the vicissitudes of fortune.
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Who would give a law to lovers? Love is unto itself a higher law.
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The completely simultaneous and perfect possession of unlimited life at a single moment.
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No man can ever be secure until he has been forsaken by Fortune.
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Good men seek it by the natural means of the virtues evil men, however, try to achieve the same goal by a variety of concupiscences, and that is surely an unnatural way of seeking the good. Don't you agree?
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In omni adversitate fortunæ, infelicissimum genus est infortunii fuisse felicem In every adversity of fortune, to have been happy is the most unhappy kind of misfortune.
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Contemplate the extent and stability of the heavens, and then at last cease to admire worthless things.
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As far as possible, join faith to reason.
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