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Whatever you want to teach, be brief.
Horace
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Horace
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Quintus Horatius Flaccus
Q. Horatius Flaccus
Horatius
Horatius Flaccus
Brief
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More quotes by Horace
He tosses aside his paint-pots and his words a foot and a half long.
Horace
Live mindful of how brief your life is.
Horace
The body loaded by the excess of yesterday, depresses the mind also, and fixes to the ground this particle of divine breath. [Lat., Quin corpus onustum Hesternis vitiis, animum quoque praegravat una Atque affigit humo divinae particulam aurae.]
Horace
Dare to begin! He who postpones living rightly is like the rustic who waits for the river to run out before he crosses.
Horace
Be ever on your guard what you say of anybody and to whom.
Horace
There is a fault common to all singers. When they're among friends and are asked to sing they don't want to, and when they're not asked to sing they never stop.
Horace
Remember to keep the mind calm in difficult moments.
Horace
Never inquire into another man's secret bur conceal that which is intrusted to you, though pressed both be wine and anger to reveal it.
Horace
When a man is just and firm in his purpose, The citizens burning to approve a wrong Or the frowning looks of a tyrant Do not shake his fixed mind, nor the Southwind. Wild lord of the uneasy Adriatic, Nor the thunder in the mighty hand of Jove: Should the heavens crack and tumble down, As the ruins crushed him he would not fear.
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
Who then is free? The wise who can command his passions, who fears not want, nor death, nor chains, firmly resisting his appetites and despising the honors of the world, who relies wholly on himself, whose angular points of character have all been rounded off and polished.
Horace
An envious man grows lean at another's fatness.
Horace
Even the worthy Homer sometimes nods.
Horace
No one is content with his own lot.
Horace
Lighten grief with hopes of a brighter morrow Temper joy, in fear of a change of fortune.
Horace
A cup concealed in the dress is rarely honestly carried.
Horace
Let this be your wall of brass, to have nothing on your conscience, no guilt to make you turn pale.
Horace
We get blows and return them.
Horace
The illustration which solves one difficulty by raising another, settles nothing. [Lat., Nil agit exemplum, litem quod lite resolvit.]
Horace
Learned or unlearned we all must be scribbling.
Horace