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The human mind ever longs for occupation.
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
An old man with something of the youth in him, may feel young in mind and heart only.
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You must become an old man in good time if you wish to be an old man long. [Lat., Mature fieri senem, si diu velis esses senex.]
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Favours out of place I regard as positive injuries.
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It is graceful in a man to think and to speak with propriety, to act with deliberation, and in every occurrence of life to find out and persevere in the truth. On the other hand, to be imposed upon, to mistake, to falter, and to be deceived, is as ungraceful as to rave or to be insane.
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I am never less alone than when alone.
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I will go further, and assert that nature without culture can often do more to deserve praise than culture without nature.
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No man should so act as to make a gain out of the ignorance of another.
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The life of the dead is placed in the memory of the living.
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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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The greatest pleasures are only narrowly separated from disgust.
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The more virtuous any man is, the less easily does he suspect others to be vicious.
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Memory is the receptacle and sheath of all knowledge
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I hear Socrates saying that the best seasoning for food is hunger for drink, thirst.
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Inability to tell good from evil is the greatest worry of man's life.
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Fire and water are not of more universal use than friendship.
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Let every man practice the art that he knows best.
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It is difficult to persuade mankind that the love of virtue is the love of themselves.
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There were poets before Homer.
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Let the punishment match the offense.
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This excessive licence, which the anarchists think is the only true freedom, provides the stock, as it were, from which a tyrant grows.
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