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So potent was religion in persuading to evil deeds.
Lucretius
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Lucretius
Philosopher
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Titus Lucretius Carus
Titus Carus Lucretius
Deeds
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Religion
Evil
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Latin
More quotes by Lucretius
For out of doubt In these affairs 'tis each man's will itself That gives the start, and hence throughout our limbs Incipient motions are diffused.
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Tears for the mourners who are left behind Peace everlasting for the quiet dead.
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...Nature allows Destruction nor collapse of aught, until Some outward force may shatter by a blow, Or inward craft, entering its hollow cells, Dissolve it down.
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The mind like a sick body can be healed and changed by medicine.
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The dreadful fear of hell is to be driven out, which disturbs the life of man and renders it miserable, overcasting all things with the blackness of darkness, and leaving no pure, unalloyed pleasure.
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The fall of dropping water wears away the Stone.
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It's easier to avoid the snares of love than to escape once you are in that net whose cords and knots are strong but even so, enmeshed, entangled, you can still get out unless, poor fool, you stand in your own way.
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Nature obliges everything to change about. One thing crumbles and falls in the weakness of age Another grows in its place from a negligible start. So time alters the whole nature of the world And earth passes from one state to another.
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There can be no centre in infinity.
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The old must always make way for the new, and one thing must be built out of the ruins of another. There is no murky pit of hell awaiting anyone.
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All nature, then, as self-sustained, consists Of twain of things: of bodies and of void In which they're set, and where they're moved around.
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Truths kindle light for truths.
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Men conceal the past scenes of their lives.
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The highest summits and those elevated above the level of other things are mostly blasted by envy as by a thunderbolt.
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The drops of rain make a hole in the stone not by violence but by oft falling.
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The sum total of all sums total is eternal (meaning the universe). [Lat., Summarum summa est aeternum.]
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Were a man to order his life by the rules of true reason, a frugal substance joined to a contented mind is for him great riches for never is there any lack of a little.
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Under what law each thing was created, and how necessary it is for it to continue under this, and how it cannot annul the strong rules that govern its lifetime.
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Violence and injury enclose in their net all that do such things, and generally return upon him who began.
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Nay, the greatest wits and poets, too, cease to live Homer, their prince, sleeps now in the same forgotten sleep as do the others. [Lat., Adde repertores doctrinarum atque leporum Adde Heliconiadum comites quorum unus Homerus Sceptra potitus, eadem aliis sopitu quiete est.]
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