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Remember to keep the mind calm in difficult moments.
Horace
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Horace
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Quintus Horatius Flaccus
Q. Horatius Flaccus
Horatius
Horatius Flaccus
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Who loves the golden mean is safe from the poverty of a tenement, is free from the envy of a palace. [Lat., Auream quisquis mediocritatem deligit tutus caret obsoleti sordibus tecti, caret invidenda sobrius aula.]
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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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The bowl dispels corroding cares.
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Curst is the wretch enslaved to such a vice, Who ventures life and soul upon the dice.
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A man perfect to the finger tips.
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Anger is brief madness
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My cares and my inquiries are for decency and truth, and in this I am wholly occupied.
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A comic matter cannot be expressed in tragic verse. [Lat., Versibus exponi tragicis res comica non vult.]
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Shun the inquisitive person, for he is also a talker. [Lat., Percunctatorem fugito, nam garrulus idem est.]
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Who then is free? the wise man who is lord over himself Whom neither poverty nor death, nor chains alarm strong to withstand his passions and despise honors, and who is completely finished and rounded off in himself.
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Take heed lest you stumble.
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If matters go badly now, they will not always be so.
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I shall strike the stars with my uplifted head.
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Wise were the kings who never chose a friend till with full cups they had unmasked his soul, and seen the bottom of his deepest thoughts.
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They change their skies, but not their souls who run across the sea.
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Men more quickly and more gladly recall what they deride than what they approve and esteem.
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The covetous person is full of fear and he or she who lives in fear will ever be a slave.
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Let not a god interfere unless where a god's assistance is necessary. [Adopt extreme measures only in extreme cases.]
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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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