Share
×
Inspirational Quotes
Authors
Professions
Topics
Tags
Quote
I have to submit to much in order to pacify the touchy tribe of poets.
Horace
Share
Change background
T
T
T
Change font
Original
TAGS & TOPICS
Horace
Philosopher
Poet
Writer
Quintus Horatius Flaccus
Q. Horatius Flaccus
Horatius
Horatius Flaccus
Much
Touchy
Tribe
Tribes
Submit
Poets
Poet
Poetry
Order
Pacify
More quotes by Horace
Sport begets tumultuous strife and wrath, and wrath begets fierce quarrels and war to the death.
Horace
The great virtue of parents is a great dowry.
Horace
The snow has at last melted, the fields regain their herbage, and the trees their leaves.
Horace
There is a fault common to all singers. When they're among friends and are asked to sing they don't want to, and when they're not asked to sing they never stop.
Horace
Enjoy in happiness the pleasures which each hour brings with it.
Horace
Enjoy thankfully any happy hour heaven may send you, nor think that your delights will keep till another year.
Horace
Hired mourners at a funeral say and do - A little more than they whose grief is true
Horace
What may not be altered is made lighter by patience.
Horace
He's arm'd without that's innocent within Be this thy Screen, and this thy Wall of Brass.
Horace
Man learns more readily and remembers more willingly what excites his ridicule than what deserves esteem and respect.
Horace
He who sings the praises of his boyhood's days.
Horace
Dull winter will re-appear.
Horace
My age, my inclinations, are no longer what they were.
Horace
Think of the wonders uncorked by wine! It opens secrets, gives heart to our hopes, pushes the cowardly into battle, lifts the load from anxious minds, and evokes talents. Thanks to the bottle's prompting no one is lost for words, no one who's cramped by poverty fails to find release.
Horace
Ah Fortune, what god is more cruel to us than thou! How thou delightest ever to make sport of human life!
Horace
Decus et pretium recte petit experiens vir. The man who makes the attempt justly aims at honour and reward.
Horace
A word, once sent abroad, flies irrevocably.
Horace
No master can make me swear blind obedience.
Horace
Virtue, dear friend, needs no defense, The surest guard is innocence: None knew, till guilt created fear, What darts or poisoned arrows were
Horace
Happy he who far from business, like the primitive are of mortals, cultivates with his own oxen the fields of his fathers, free from all anxieties of gain.
Horace