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Desiring things widely different for their various tastes.
Horace
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Quintus Horatius Flaccus
Q. Horatius Flaccus
Horatius
Horatius Flaccus
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The impartial earth opens alike for the child of the pauper and the king.
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Live mindful of how brief your life is.
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Who then is free? The wise who can command his passions, who fears not want, nor death, nor chains, firmly resisting his appetites and despising the honors of the world, who relies wholly on himself, whose angular points of character have all been rounded off and polished.
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This was my prayer: an adequate portion of land with a garden and a spring of water and a small wood to complete the picture.
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Splendidly mendacious. [Lat., Splendide mendax.]
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The whole race of scribblers flies from the town and yearns for country life.
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Let us both small and great push forward in this work, in this pursuit, if to our country, if to ourselves we would live dear.
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Wisdom at times is found in folly.
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Who then is free? The wise man who can govern himself.
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People hiss at me, but I applaud myself in my own house, and at the same time contemplate the money in my chest.
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My age, my inclinations, are no longer what they were.
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When discord dreadful bursts the brazen bars, And shatters iron locks to thunder forth her wars.
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Content with his past life, let him take leave of life like a satiated guest.
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He who has lost his money-belt will go where you wish.
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Be not ashamed to have had wild days, but not to have sown your wild oats.
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Enjoy thankfully any happy hour heaven may send you, nor think that your delights will keep till another year.
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When we try to avoid one fault, we are led to the opposite, unless we be very careful.
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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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Abridge your hopes in proportion to the shortness of the span of human life for while we converse, the hours, as if envious of our pleasure, fly away: enjoy, therefore, the present time, and trust not too much to what to-morrow may produce.
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The mountains are in labour, the birth will be an absurd little mouse.
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