Share
×
Inspirational Quotes
Authors
Professions
Topics
Tags
Quote
No verse can give pleasure for long, nor last, that is written by drinkers of water.
Horace
Share
Change background
T
T
T
Change font
Original
TAGS & TOPICS
Horace
Philosopher
Poet
Writer
Quintus Horatius Flaccus
Q. Horatius Flaccus
Horatius
Horatius Flaccus
Lasts
Last
Water
Drinkers
Give
Verse
Giving
Verses
Long
Written
Pleasure
Literature
More quotes by Horace
The words can not return.
Horace
Multa ferunt anni venientes commoda secum, Multa recedentes adimiunt. (The years, as they come, bring many agreeable things with them as they go, they take many away.)
Horace
Keep clear of courts: a homely life transcends The vaunted bliss of monarchs and their friends.
Horace
Even play has ended in fierce strife and anger.
Horace
He will be loved when dead, who was envied when he was living.
Horace
Pale death knocks with impartial foot at poor men's hovels and king's palaces.
Horace
The muse does not allow the praise-de-serving here to die: she enthrones him in the heavens.
Horace
When discord dreadful bursts the brazen bars, And shatters iron locks to thunder forth her wars.
Horace
When a man is pleased with the lot of others, he is dissatisfied with his own, as a matter of course.
Horace
With self-discipline most anything is possible. Theodore Roosevelt Rule your mind or it will rule you.
Horace
Be not ashamed to have had wild days, but not to have sown your wild oats.
Horace
The horse would plough, the ox would drive the car. No do the work you know, and tarry where you are.
Horace
He has half the deed done who has made a beginning.
Horace
It is of no consequence of what parents a man is born, as long as he be a man of merit.
Horace
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.
Horace
Not to hope for things to last forever, is what the year teaches and even the hour which snatches a nice day away.
Horace
He who postpones the hour of living as he ought, is like the rustic who waits for the river to pass along (before he crosses) but it glides on and will glide forever. [Lat., Vivendi recte qui prorogat horam Rusticus expectat dum defluat amnis at ille Labitur et labetur in omne volubilis aevum.]
Horace
Be brief, that the mind may catch thy precepts, and the more easily retain them.
Horace
It is the false shame of fools to try to conceal wounds that have not healed.
Horace
My liver swells with bile difficult to repress.
Horace