Share
×
Inspirational Quotes
Authors
Professions
Topics
Tags
Quote
Those ills are easiest to bear with which we are most familiar.
Livy
Share
Change background
T
T
T
Change font
Original
TAGS & TOPICS
Livy
Historian
Poet
Writer
Padova
Livy
Titus Livius Patavinus
Ills
Easiest
Endurance
Familiar
Bear
Bears
More quotes by Livy
Luck rules every human endeavor, especially war.
Livy
Fortune blinds men when she does not wish them to withstand the violence of her onslaughts.
Livy
By flying, men often rush into the midst of calamities.
Livy
Men are least safe from what success induces them not to fear.
Livy
Nature has ordained that the man who is pleading his own cause before a large audience, will be more readily listened to than he who has no object in view other than the public benefit.
Livy
He will have true glory who despises it.
Livy
Better late than never.
Livy
It is better that a guilty man should not be brought to trial than that he should be acquitted.
Livy
There is nothing worse than being ashamed of parsimony or poverty.
Livy
...war is just to those for whom it is necessary, and arms are clear of impiety for those who have no hope left but in arms.
Livy
The name of freedom regained is sweet to hear.
Livy
All things will be clear and distinct to the man who does not hurry haste is blind and improvident.
Livy
Toil and pleasure, in their natures opposite, are yet linked together in a kind of necessary connection.
Livy
Avarice and luxury, those evils which have been the ruin of every great state.
Livy
The best known evil is the most tolerable.
Livy
There is nothing man will not attempt when great enterprises hold out the promise of great rewards.
Livy
We survive on adversity and perish in ease and comfort.
Livy
When Tarquin the Proud was asked what was the best mode of governing a conquered city, he replied only by beating down with his staff all the tallest poppies in his garden.
Livy
Law is a thing which is insensible, and inexorable, more beneficial and more profitious to the weak than to the strong it admits of no mitigation nor pardon, once you have overstepped its limits.
Livy
Toil and pleasure, dissimilar in nature, are nevertheless united by a certain natural bond.
Livy