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Desiring things widely different for their various tastes.
Horace
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Horace
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Quintus Horatius Flaccus
Q. Horatius Flaccus
Horatius
Horatius Flaccus
Widely
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More quotes by Horace
Wine brings to light the hidden secrets of the soul.
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Happy is the man to whom nature has given a sufficiency with even a sparing hand.
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Fate with impartial hand turns out the doom of high and low her capacious urn is constantly shaking the names of all mankind.
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I have raised for myself a monument more durable than brass.
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Superfluous advice is not retained by the full mind.
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Marble statues, engraved with public inscriptions, by which the life and soul return after death to noble leaders.
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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.
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The snow has at last melted, the fields regain their herbage, and the trees their leaves.
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The hour of happiness which comes unexpectedly is the happiest.
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Carpe diem. (Seize the day.)
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All else-valor, a good name, glory, everything in heaven and earth-is secondary to the charm of riches.
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What do sad complaints avail if the offense is not cut down by punishment.
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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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False praise can please, and calumny affright None but the vicious, and the hypocrite.
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Capture your reader, let him not depart, from dull beginnings that refuse to start
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Pale death knocks with impartial foot at poor men's hovels and king's palaces.
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You will have written exceptionally well if, by skilful arrangement of your words, you have made an ordinary one seem original.
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Poets wish to profit or to please.
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I hate the irreverent rabble and keep them far from me.
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He has half the deed done who has made a beginning.
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