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Only a stomach that rarely feels hungry scorns common things.
Horace
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Horace
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Quintus Horatius Flaccus
Q. Horatius Flaccus
Horatius
Horatius Flaccus
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More quotes by Horace
He who is always in a hurry to be wealthy and immersed in the study of augmenting his fortune has lost the arms of reason and deserted the post of virtue.
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Too indolent to bear the toil of writing I mean of writing well I say nothing about quantity. [Lat., Piger scribendi ferre laborem Scribendi recte, nam ut multum nil moror.]
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Flames too soon acquire strength if disregarded.
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Aiming at brevity, I become obscure.
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Superfluous advice is not retained by the full mind.
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Drive Nature from your door with a pitchfork, and she will return again and again.
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The short span of life forbids us to take on far-reaching hopes.
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Thou oughtest to know, since thou livest near the gods. [Lat., Scire, deos quoniam propius contingis, oportet.]
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Betray not a secret even though racked by wine or wrath.
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False praise can please, and calumny affright None but the vicious, and the hypocrite.
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Virtue consists in fleeing vice.
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Day is pushed out by day, and each new moon hastens to its death. [Lat., Truditur dies die, Novaeque pergunt interire lunae.]
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Men more quickly and more gladly recall what they deride than what they approve and esteem.
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He, who has blended the useful with the sweet, has gained every point .
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It is sweet and right to die for the homeland, but it is sweeter to live for the homeland, and the sweetest to drink for it. Therefore, let us drink to the health of the homeland.
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Happy he who far from business, like the primitive are of mortals, cultivates with his own oxen the fields of his fathers, free from all anxieties of gain.
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What may not be altered is made lighter by patience.
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Sport begets tumultuous strife and wrath, and wrath begets fierce quarrels and war to the death.
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It is difficult to administer properly what belongs to all in common.
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The man who has lost his purse will go wherever you wish. [Lat., Ibit eo quo vis qui zonam perdidit.]
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