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Diseases of the soul are more dangerous and more numerous than those of the body.
Marcus Tullius Cicero
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Marcus Tullius Cicero
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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
I follow nature as the surest guide, and resign myself with implicit obedience to her sacred ordinances.
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Justice renders to every one his due.
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The spirit is the true self. The spirit, the will to win, and the will to excel are the things that endure.
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By Hercules! I prefer to err with Plato, whom I know how much you value, than to be right in the company of such men.
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I never heard of an old man forgetting where he had buried his money. Old people remember what interests them: the dates fixed for their lawsuits, and the names of their debtors and creditors.
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We all are imbued with the love of praise.
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To teach is a necessity, to please is a sweetness, to persuade is a victory.
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Hours and days and months and years go by the past returns no more, and what is to be we cannot know but whatever the time gives us in which we live, we should therefore be content.
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Vicious habits are so odious and degrading that they transform the individual who practices them into an incarnate demon.
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True glory takes root, and even spreads all false pretences, like flowers, fall to the ground nor can any counterfeit last long.
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What is becoming is honest, and whatever is honest must always be becoming.
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Vicious habits are so great a stain to human nature, and so odious in themselves, that every person actuated by right reason would avoid them, though he were sure they would be always concealed both from God and man, and had no future punishment entailed upon them.
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No one sees what is before his feet: we all gaze at the stars. [Lat., Quod est ante pedes nemo spectat: coeli scrutantur plagas.]
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We can more easily avenge an injury than requite a kindness on this account, because there is less difficulty in getting the better of the wicked than in making one's self equal with the good.
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Falsehoods border on truths.
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Non nobis solum nati sumus. (Not for ourselves alone are we born.)
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Orators are most vehement when their cause is weak.
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After victory, you have more enemies.
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There is no duty more obligatory than the repayment of kindness.
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No man was ever great without divine inspiration. [Lat., Nemo vir magnus aliquo afflatu divino unquam fuit.]
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