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Sapere aude. Dare to be wise.
Horace
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Quintus Horatius Flaccus
Q. Horatius Flaccus
Horatius
Horatius Flaccus
Dare
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More quotes by Horace
Happy and thrice happy are those who enjoy an uninterrupted union, and whose love, unbroken by any sour complaints, shall not dissolve until the last day of their existence.
Horace
Avoid inquisitive persons, for they are sure to be gossips, their ears are open to hear, but they will not keep what is entrusted to them.
Horace
Joking apart, now let us be serious.
Horace
Poverty urges us to do and suffer anything that we may escape from it, and so leads us away from virtue.
Horace
The lazy ox wishes for horse-trappings, and the steed wishes to plough. [Lat., Optat ephippia bos piger, optat arare caballus.]
Horace
It is but a poor establishment where there are not many superfluous things which the owner knows not of, and which go to the thieves.
Horace
Even play has ended in fierce strife and anger.
Horace
The musician who always plays on the same string is laughed at.
Horace
Why harass with eternal purposes a mind to weak to grasp them?
Horace
The one who cannot restrain their anger will wish undone, what their temper and irritation prompted them to do.
Horace
At Rome I love Tibur then, like a weathercock, at Tibur Rome.
Horace
Thou oughtest to know, since thou livest near the gods. [Lat., Scire, deos quoniam propius contingis, oportet.]
Horace
I wrap myself up in virtue. [Lat., Mea virtute me involvo.]
Horace
Shun an inquisitive man, he is invariably a tell-tale.
Horace
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.]
Horace
The shame is not in having sported, but in not having broken off the sport. [Lat., Nec luisse pudet, sed non incidere ludum.]
Horace
God has joined the innocent with the guilty.
Horace
Often a purple patch or two is tacked on to a serious work of high promise, to give an effect of colour.
Horace
The poets aim is either to profit or to please, or to blend in one the delightful and the useful. Whatever the lesson you would convey, be brief, that your hearers may catch quickly what is said and faithfully retain it. Every superfluous word is spilled from the too-full memory.
Horace
Do not try to find out - we're forbidden to know - what end the gods have in store for me, or for you.
Horace