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What an ugly beast the ape, and how like us.
Marcus Tullius Cicero
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Marcus Tullius Cicero
Ancient Roman Military Personnel
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Marcus Tullius Cicero
M. Tullii Ciceronis
Marcus Tullius -- Translations into French Cicero
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More quotes by Marcus Tullius Cicero
Exercise and temperance can preserve something of our early strength even in old age.
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The whole of virtue consists in its practice.
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The master sometimes serves, and the servant sometimes is master.
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The man who is always fortunate cannot easily have a great reverence for virtue.
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Time obliterates the fictions of opinion and confirms the decisions of nature.
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Nothing is too absurd to be said by some of the philosophers.
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I do not understand what the man who is happy wants in order to be happier.
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The whole glory of virtue resides in activity.
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The study and knowledge of the universe would somehow be lame and defective were no practical results to follow.
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We are born poets. we become orators.
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It is the character of a brave and resolute man not to be ruffled by adversity and not to desert his post.
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I believe that no characteristic is so distinctively human as the sense of indebtedness we feel, not necessarily for a favor received, but even for the slightest evidence of kindness and there is nothing so boorish, savage, inhuman as to appear to be overwhelmed by a favor, let alone unworthy of it.
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After victory, you have more enemies.
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No man can be brave who thinks pain the greatest evil nor temperate, who considers pleasure the highest god. [Lat., Fortis vero, dolorem summum malum judicans aut temperans, voluptatem summum bonum statuens, esse certe nullo modo potest.]
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Law stands mute in the midst of arms.
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To know the laws is not to memorize their letter but to grasp their full force and meaning.
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Of all the rewards of virtue, . . . the most splendid is fame, for it is fame alone that can offer us the memory of posterity.
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The foundation of justice is good faith.
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The mansion should not be graced by its master, the master should grace the mansion.
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I do not wish to die: but I care not if I were dead. [Lat., Emori nolo: sed me esse mortuum nihil aestimo.]
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