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Small things become small folks.
Horace
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Horace
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Quintus Horatius Flaccus
Q. Horatius Flaccus
Horatius
Horatius Flaccus
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There is nothing hard inside the olive nothing hard outside the nut.
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Frugality is one thing, avarice another.
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Virtue, dear friend, needs no defense, The surest guard is innocence: None knew, till guilt created fear, What darts or poisoned arrows were
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Splendidly mendacious. [Lat., Splendide mendax.]
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With you I should love to live, with you be ready to die.
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Don't waste the opportunity.
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It is right for him who asks forgiveness for his offenses to grant it to others.
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A word, once sent abroad, flies irrevocably.
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The poet must put on the passion he wants to represent.
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Wherein is the use of getting rid of one thorn out of many?
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Receive, dear friend, the truths I teach, So shalt thou live beyond the reach Of adverse Fortune's pow'r Not always tempt the distant deep, Nor always timorously creep Along the treach'rous shore.
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Better wilt thou live...by neither always pressing out to sea nor too closely hugging the dangerous shore in cautious fear of storms.
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A well-prepared mind hopes in adversity and fears in prosperity. [Lat., Sperat infestis, metuit secundis Alteram sortem, bene preparatum Pectus.]
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If you wish me to weep, you yourself must first feel grief.
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In going abroad we change the climate not our dispositions.
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There are lessons to be learned from a stupid man.
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If you rank me with the lyric poets, my exalted head shall strike the stars. [Lat., Quod si me lyricis vatibus inseris, Sublimi feriam sidera vertice.]
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Capture your reader, let him not depart, from dull beginnings that refuse to start
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The cautious wolf fears the pit, the hawk regards with suspicion the snare laid for her, and the fish the hook in its concealment.
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Neither men, nor gods, nor booksellers' shelves permit ordinary poets to exist. [Lat., Mediocribus esse poetis Non homines, non di, non concessere columnae.]
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