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Brother, hello and good-bye. Frater, ave atque vale
Catullus
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Catullus
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Gaius Valerius Catullus
Vale
Bye
Hello
Brother
Good
Atque
More quotes by Catullus
Nothing is more silly than silly laughter.
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It is difficult to lay aside a confirmed passion.
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Godlike the man who sits at her side, who watches and catches that laughter which (softly) tears me to tatters: nothing is left of me, each time I see her.
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Oh, this age! How tasteless and ill bred it is!
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So a maiden, whilst she remains untouched, so long is she dear to her own when she has lost her chaste flower with sullied body, she remains neither lovely to boys nor dear to girls.
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It is difficult to suddenly give up a long love. Difficile est longum subito deponere amorem
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Who now travels that dark path from whose bourne they say no one returns. [Lat., Qui nunc it per iter tenebricosum Illue unde negant redire quemquam.]
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Away with you, water, destruction of wine!
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Every one has his faults: but we do not see the wallet on our own backs.
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The confounding of all right and wrong, in wild fury, has averted from us the gracious favor of the gods.
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We see not our own backs.
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I hate and love. You ask, perhaps, how can that be? I know not, but I feel the agony.
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I can imagine no greater misfortune for a cultured people than to see in the hands of the rulers not only the civil, but also the religious power.
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I hate and love. And why, perhaps you’ll ask. I don’t know: but I feel, and I’m tormented.
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I hate and I love. And if you ask me how, I do not know: I only feel it, and I am torn in two.
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My lady's sparrow is dead, the sparrow which was my lady's delight
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Give me a thousand kisses, then a hundred, then a thousand more.
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Let us live, my Lesbia, and let us love. Vivamus, mea Lesbia, atque amemus
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For the godly poet must be chaste himself, but there is no need for his verses to be so.
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To whom do I give my new elegant little book? Cui dono lepidum novum libellum?
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