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Who can love the man he fears. or by who he thinks he is himself feared?
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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Crimes are not to be measured by the issue of events, but by the bad intentions of men.
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Memory is the receptacle and sheath of all knowledge
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There is no statement so absurd that no philosopher will make it.
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I cannot find a faithful message-bearer, he wrote to his friend, the scholar Atticus. How few are they who are able to carry a rather weighty letter without lightening it by reading.
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Whatever is done without ostentation, and without the people being witnesses of it, is, in my opinion, most praiseworthy: not that the public eye should be entirely avoided, for good actions desire to be placed in the light but notwithstanding this, the greatest theater for virtue is conscience.
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In the very books in which philosophers bid us scorn fame, they inscribe their names.
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Mathematics is an obscure field, an abstruse science, complicated and exact yet so many have attained perfection in it that we might conclude almost anyone who seriously applied himself would achieve a measure of success.
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So it may well be believed that when I found him taking a complete holiday, with a vast supply of books at command, he had the air of indulging in a literary debauch, if the term may be applied to so honorable an occupation.
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Nature abhors annihilation.
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To-morrow will give some food for thought.
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Be sure that it is not you that is mortal, but only your body. For that man whom your outward form reveals is not yourself the spirit is the true self, not that physical figure which and be pointed out by your finger.
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The happiest end of life is this: when the mind and the other senses being unimpaired, the same nature which put it together takes asunder her own work.
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Laws should be interpreted in a liberal sense so that their intention may be preserved.
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