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Busy idleness urges us on.
Horace
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Horace
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Quintus Horatius Flaccus
Q. Horatius Flaccus
Horatius
Horatius Flaccus
Idleness
Urges
Busy
More quotes by Horace
Take too much pleasure in good things, you'll feel The shock of adverse fortune makes you reel.
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The poets aim is either to profit or to please, or to blend in one the delightful and the useful. Whatever the lesson you would convey, be brief, that your hearers may catch quickly what is said and faithfully retain it. Every superfluous word is spilled from the too-full memory.
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My age, my inclinations, are no longer what they were.
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A word once let out of the cage cannot be whistled back again.
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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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Be brief, that the mind may catch thy precepts, and the more easily retain them.
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Money is a handmaiden, if thou knowest how to use it A mistress, if thou knowest not.
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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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Much is wanting to those who seek or covet much.
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As a true translator you will take care not to translate word for word.
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Poverty urges us to do and suffer anything that we may escape from it, and so leads us away from virtue.
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Does he council you better who bids you, Money, by right means, if you can: but by any means, make money ?
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Little folks become their little fate.
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He possesses dominion over himself, and is happy, who can every day say, I have lived. Tomorrow the heavenly father may either involve the world in dark clouds, or cheer it with clear sunshine, he will not, however, render ineffectual the things which have already taken place.
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Drawing is the true test of art.
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Whatever advice you give, be short.
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O citizens, first acquire wealth you can practice virtue afterward.
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At Rome I love Tibur then, like a weathercock, at Tibur Rome.
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Be not ashamed to have had wild days, but not to have sown your wild oats.
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Aiming at brevity, I become obscure.
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