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Mistakes are their own instructors
Horace
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Horace
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Quintus Horatius Flaccus
Q. Horatius Flaccus
Horatius
Horatius Flaccus
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More quotes by Horace
What we learn only through the ears makes less impression upon our minds than what is presented to the trustworthy eye.
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And I endeavour to subdue circumstances to myself, and not myself to circumstances. [Lat., Et mihi res, non me rebus, subjungere conor.]
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Your property is in danger when your neighbour's house is on fire.
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Man learns more readily and remembers more willingly what excites his ridicule than what deserves esteem and respect.
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How great, my friends, is the virtue of living upon a little!
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Surely oak and threefold brass surrounded his heart who first trusted a frail vessel to the merciless ocean.
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Anger is a momentary madness, so control your passion or it will control you.
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My liver swells with bile difficult to repress.
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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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They change their skies, but not their souls who run across the sea.
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In my youth I thought of writing a satire on mankind! but now in my age I think I should write an apology for them.
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Whatever things injure your eye you are anxious to remove but things which affect your mind you defer.
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O sweet solace of labors. [Lat., O laborum Dulce lenimen.]
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Get what start the sinner may, Retribution, for all her lame leg, never quits his track.
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We are free to yield to truth.
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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.]
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Let me posses what I now have, or even less, so that I may enjoy my remaining days, if Heaven grant any to remain.
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Physicians attend to the business of physicians, and workmen handle the tools of workmen. [Lat., Quod medicorum est Promittunt medici, tractant fabrilia fabri.]
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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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Who is a good man? He who keeps the decrees of the fathers, and both human and divine laws. [Lat., Vir bonus est quis? Qui consulta patrum, qui leges juraque servat.]
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