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Human life lay foul before men's eyes, crushed to the dust beneath religion's weight.
Lucretius
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Lucretius
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Titus Lucretius Carus
Titus Carus Lucretius
Life
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More quotes by Lucretius
Those things that are in the light we behold from darkness.
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From the midst of the very fountain of pleasure, something of bitterness arises to vex us in the flower of enjoyment.
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Time changes the nature of the whole world Everything passes from one state to another And nothing stays like itself.
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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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And life is given to none freehold, but it is leasehold for all.
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But yet creation's neither crammed nor blocked About by body: there's in things a void- Which to have known will serve thee many a turn, Nor will not leave thee wandering in doubt, Forever searching in the sum of all, And losing faith in these pronouncements mine.
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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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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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Mother of Aeneas, pleasure of men and gods. -Aeneadum genetrix, hominum divomque voluptas
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Some species increase, others diminish, and in a short space the generations of living creatures are changed and, like runners, pass on the torch of life.
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Fear is the mother of all gods ... Nature does all things spontaneously, by herself, without the meddling of the gods.
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Therefore there is not anything which returns to nothing, but all things return dissolved into their elements.
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What once sprung from the earth sinks back into the earth.
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These [the senses] we trust, first, last, and always.
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Tears for the mourners who are left behind Peace everlasting for the quiet dead.
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Huts they made then, and fire, and skins for clothing, And a woman yielded to one man in wedlock... ... Common, to see the offspring they had made The human race began to mellow then. Because of fire their shivering forms no longer Could bear the cold beneath the covering sky.
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It is pleasurable, when winds disturb the waves of a great sea, to gaze out from land upon the great trials of another.
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Sweet it is, when on the high seas the winds are lashing the waters, to gaze from the land on another's struggles.
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So, little by little, time brings out each several thing into view, and reason raises it up into the shores of light.
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... deprived of pain, and also deprived of danger, able to do what it wants, [Nature] does not need us, nor understands our deserts, and it cannot be angry.
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