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Luck cannot change birth.
Horace
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Horace
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Quintus Horatius Flaccus
Q. Horatius Flaccus
Horatius
Horatius Flaccus
Luck
Birth
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More quotes by Horace
No one is born without vices, and he is the best man who is encumbered with the least.
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In going abroad we change the climate not our dispositions.
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The covetous person is full of fear and he or she who lives in fear will ever be a slave.
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Whatever things injure your eye you are anxious to remove but things which affect your mind you defer.
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Cease to ask what the morrow will bring forth, and set down as gain each day that fortune grants.
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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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Seek not to inquire what the morrow will bring with it.
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Be brief, that the mind may catch thy precepts, and the more easily retain them.
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In adversity be spirited and firm, and with equal prudence lessen your sail when filled with a too fortunate gale of prosperity.
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Surely oak and threefold brass surrounded his heart who first trusted a frail vessel to the merciless ocean.
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Virtue consists in fleeing vice.
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Fierce eagles breed not the tender dove.
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Curst is the wretch enslaved to such a vice, Who ventures life and soul upon the dice.
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Happy and thrice happy are those who enjoy an uninterrupted union, and whose love, unbroken by any sour complaints, shall not dissolve until the last day of their existence.
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You may drive out nature with a pitchfork, yet she'll be constantly running back.
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Mingle some brief folly with wisdom now: To be foolish is sweet at times.
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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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There is likewise a reward for faithful silence. [Lat., Est et fideli tuta silentio merces.]
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The trainer trains the docile horse to turn, with his sensitive neck, whichever way the rider indicates.
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At Rome I love Tibur then, like a weathercock, at Tibur Rome.
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