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Rashness attends youth, as prudence does old age.
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
Strain every nerve to gain your point.
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Grief is not in the nature of things, but in opinion.
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The judgment of posterity is truer, because it is free from envy and malevolence.
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As I approve of a youth that has something of the old man in him, so I am no less pleased with an old man that has something of the youth. He that follows this rule may be old in body, but can never be so in mind.
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Each part of life has its own pleasures. Each has its own abundant harvest, to be garnered in season. We may grow old in body, but we need never grow old in mind and spirit. No one is as old as to think he or she cannot live one more year.
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Though silence is not necessarily an admission, it is not a denial, either.
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Fewer possess virtue, than those who wish us to believe that they possess it.
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I hear Socrates saying that the best seasoning for food is hunger for drink, thirst.
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Favours out of place I regard as positive injuries.
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Nature abhors annihilation. [Lat., Ab interitu naturam abhorrere.]
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No deceit is so veiled as that which lies concealed behind the semblance of courtesy.
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That which leads us to the performance of duty by offering pleasure as its reward, is not virtue, but a deceptive copy and imitation of virtue. [Lat., Nam quae voluptate, quasi mercede aliqua, ad officium impellitur, ea non est virtus sed fallax imitatio simulatioque virtutis.]
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The roots of knowledge are bitter, but its fruit are sweet.
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Men think they may justly do that for which they have a precedent.
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Nature abhors annihilation.
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But as to the affection which anyone may have for us, it is the first demand of duty that we do most for him who loves us most but we should measure affection, not like youngsters, by the ardour of its passion, but rather by its strength and constancy.
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The eyes like sentinel occupy the highest place in the body.
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Liberty consists in the power of doing that which is permitted by the law.
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A dissolute and intemperate youth hands down the body to old age in a worn-out state.
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As I breathe, I hope.
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