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What it is forbidden to be put right becomes lighter by acceptance.
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
Small things become small folks.
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Live as brave men and face adversity with stout hearts.
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The earth opens impartially her bosom to receive the beggar and the prince.
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I will perform the function of a whetstone, which is about to restore sharpness to iron, though itself unable to cut. [Lat., Fungar vice cotis, acutum Reddere quae ferrum valet, exsors ipsi secandi.]
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God can change the lowest to the highest, abase the proud, and raise the humble.
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The snow has at last melted, the fields regain their herbage, and the trees their leaves.
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In the same [hospitable] manner that a Calabrian would press you to eat his pears.
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To please great men is not the last degree of praise.
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He has not lived badly whose birth and death has been unnoticed by the world.
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The lofty pine is most easily brought low by the force of the wind, and the higher the tower the greater the fall thereof.
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Be brief, that the mind may catch thy precepts, and the more easily retain them.
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In the midst of hopes and cares, of apprehensions and of disquietude, regard every day that dawns upon you as if it was to be your last then super-added hours, to the enjoyment of which you had not looked forward, will prove an acceptable boon.
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Not to hope for things to last forever, is what the year teaches and even the hour which snatches a nice day away.
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Mix a little foolishness with your serious plans. It is lovely to be silly at the right moment.
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Anger is momentary madness, so control your passion or it will control you.
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Alas! the fleeting years, how they roll on!
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Believe it, future generations.
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Poets, the first instructors of mankind, Brought all things to the proper native use.
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No one is born without vices, and he is the best man who is encumbered with the least.
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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.
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