Share
×
Inspirational Quotes
Authors
Professions
Topics
Tags
Quote
Youth is unduly busy with pampering the outer person.
Horace
Share
Change background
T
T
T
Change font
Original
TAGS & TOPICS
Horace
Philosopher
Poet
Writer
Quintus Horatius Flaccus
Q. Horatius Flaccus
Horatius
Horatius Flaccus
Busy
Youth
Persons
Person
Time
Pampering
Unduly
Outer
More quotes by Horace
It is good to labor it is also good to rest from labor.
Horace
Enjoy in happiness the pleasures which each hour brings with it.
Horace
A comic matter cannot be expressed in tragic verse. [Lat., Versibus exponi tragicis res comica non vult.]
Horace
Be smart, drink your wine.
Horace
Whatever things injure your eye you are anxious to remove but things which affect your mind you defer.
Horace
Take subject matter equal to your powers, and ponder long, what your shoulders cannot bear, and what they can.
Horace
There is a fault common to all singers. When they're among friends and are asked to sing they don't want to, and when they're not asked to sing they never stop.
Horace
There is nothing hard inside the olive nothing hard outside the nut.
Horace
It is right for him who asks forgiveness for his offenses to grant it to others.
Horace
Deep in the cavern of the infant's breast the father's nature lurks, and lives anew.
Horace
And seek for truth in the groves of Academe.
Horace
The explanation avails nothing, which in leading us from one difficulty involves us in another.
Horace
When we try to avoid one fault, we are led to the opposite, unless we be very careful.
Horace
Remember you must die whether you sit about moping all day long or whether on feast days you stretch out in a green field, happy with a bottle of Falernian from your innermost cellar.
Horace
Carpe diem, quam minimum credula postero'Snatch at today and trust as little as you can in tomorrow' - (Odes) Often translated as 'Seize the day'.
Horace
Multa ferunt anni venientes commoda secum, Multa recedentes adimiunt. (The years, as they come, bring many agreeable things with them as they go, they take many away.)
Horace
Adversity is wont to reveal genius, prosperity to hide it.
Horace
The man is either mad or his is making verses. [Lat., Aut insanit homo, aut versus facit.]
Horace
Leave the rest to the gods.
Horace
He, that holds fast the golden mean, And lives contentedly between The little and the great, Feels not the wants that pinch the poor, Nor plagues that haunt the rich man's door, Imbitt'ring all his state.
Horace