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Smooth out with wine the worries of a wrinkled brow.
Horace
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Horace
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Quintus Horatius Flaccus
Q. Horatius Flaccus
Horatius
Horatius Flaccus
Worry
Wrinkled
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Wine
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He who has made it a practice to lie and deceive his father, will be the most daring in deceiving others.
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Let us both small and great push forward in this work, in this pursuit, if to our country, if to ourselves we would live dear.
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If the crow had been satisfied to eat his prey in silence, he would have had more meat and less quarreling and envy.
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Abridge your hopes in proportion to the shortness of the span of human life for while we converse, the hours, as if envious of our pleasure, fly away: enjoy, therefore, the present time, and trust not too much to what to-morrow may produce.
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Force without reason falls of its own weight.
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He has not lived badly whose birth and death has been unnoticed by the world.
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Riches either serve or govern the possessor.
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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.
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False praise can please, and calumny affright None but the vicious, and the hypocrite.
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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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If a man's fortune does not fit him, it is like the shoe in the story if too large it trips him up, if too small it pinches him.
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Those that are little, little things suit.
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One gains universal applause who mingles the useful with the agreeable, at once delighting and instructing the reader.
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He has half the deed done who has made a beginning.
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Though you strut proud of your money, yet fortune has not changed your birth. [Lat., Licet superbus ambules pecuniae, Fortuna non mutat genus.]
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