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When you introduce a moral lesson, let it be brief.
Horace
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Horace
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Quintus Horatius Flaccus
Q. Horatius Flaccus
Horatius
Horatius Flaccus
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Mistakes are their own instructors
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If nothing is delightful without love and jokes, then live in love and jokes.
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Lawyers are men who hire out their words and anger.
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Money is to be sought for first of all virtue after wealth. [Lat., Quaerenda pecunia primum est virtus post nummos.]
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Wine brings to light the hidden secrets of the soul.
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He who is greedy is always in want.
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Anger is a short madness.
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Happy the man who, removed from all cares of business, after the manner of his forefathers cultivates with his own team his paternal acres, freed from all thought of usury.
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The just man having a firm grasp of his intentions, neither the heated passions of his fellow men ordaining something awful, nor a tyrant staring him in the face, will shake in his convictions.
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To know all things is not permitted.
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The whole race of scribblers flies from the town and yearns for country life.
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Luck cannot change birth.
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False praise can please, and calumny affright None but the vicious, and the hypocrite.
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Life gives nothing to man without labor.
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A good resolve will make any port.
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It is difficult to speak of the universal specifically.
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Who then is free? The wise man who can govern himself.
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As riches grow, care follows, and a thirst For more and more.
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With you I should love to live, with you be ready to die.
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