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If you drive nature out with a pitchfork, she will soon find a way back.
Horace
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Horace
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Quintus Horatius Flaccus
Q. Horatius Flaccus
Horatius
Horatius Flaccus
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Remember to be calm in adversity.
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A heart well prepared for adversity in bad times hopes, and in good times fears for a change in fortune.
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Seek not to inquire what the morrow will bring with it.
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A stomach that is seldom empty despises common food. [Lat., Jejunus raro stomachus vulgaria temnit.]
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Books have their destinies.
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Let this be your wall of brass, to have nothing on your conscience, no guilt to make you turn pale.
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For example, the tiny ant, a creature of great industry, drags with its mouth whatever it can, and adds it to the heap which she is piling up, not unaware nor careless of the future.
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Abridge your hopes in proportion to the shortness of the span of human life for while we converse, the hours, as if envious of our pleasure, fly away: enjoy, therefore, the present time, and trust not too much to what to-morrow may produce.
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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.]
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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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As a neighboring funeral terrifies sick misers, and fear obliges them to have some regard for themselves so, the disgrace of others will often deter tender minds from vice.
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Drawing is the true test of art.
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We hate virtue when it is safe when removed from our sight we diligently seek it. [Lat., Virtutem incolumem odimus, Sublatum ex oculis quaerimus.]
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In avoiding one vice fools rush into the opposite extreme.
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High descent and meritorious deeds, unless united to wealth, are as useless as seaweed.
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Having no business of his own to attend to, he busies himself with the affairs of others.
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Fierce eagles breed not the tender dove.
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Let it (what you have written) be kept back until the ninth year. [Lat., Nonumque prematur in annum.]
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The jackdaw, stript of her stolen colours, provokes our laughter.
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When a man is pleased with the lot of others, he is dissatisfied with his own, as a matter of course.
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