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Limbs of a dismembered poet.
Horace
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Horace
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Quintus Horatius Flaccus
Q. Horatius Flaccus
Horatius
Horatius Flaccus
Dismembered
Limbs
Latin
Poet
More quotes by Horace
Let the fictitious sources of pleasure be as near as possible to the true.
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Take too much pleasure in good things, you'll feel The shock of adverse fortune makes you reel.
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Anger is brief madness
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Marble statues, engraved with public inscriptions, by which the life and soul return after death to noble leaders.
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Happy is the man to whom nature has given a sufficiency with even a sparing hand.
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No verse can give pleasure for long, nor last, that is written by drinkers of water.
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Whom does undeserved honour please, and undeserved blame alarm, but the base and the liar?
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There is moderation in everything.
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A good scare is worth more than good advice.
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The explanation avails nothing, which in leading us from one difficulty involves us in another.
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We rarely find anyone who can say he has lived a happy life, and who, content with his life, can retire from the world like a satisfied guest.
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The hour of happiness which comes unexpectedly is the happiest.
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Ridicule often cuts the knot, where severity fails.
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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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You will have written exceptionally well if, by skilful arrangement of your words, you have made an ordinary one seem original.
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I am not what I once was. [Lat., Non sum qualis eram.]
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Where there are many beauties in a poem I shall not cavil at a few faults proceeding either from negligence or from the imperfection of our nature.
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A shoe that is too large is apt to trip one, and when too small, to pinch the feet. So it is with those whose fortune does not suit them.
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We are just statistics, born to consume resources.
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Wherein is the use of getting rid of one thorn out of many?
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