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If fame comes after death, I'm in no hurry for it. [Lat., Si post fata venit gloria non propero.]
Martial
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Martial
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More quotes by Martial
I wont let a wife lead me to the altar. [I will not have a wife that shall be my master.]
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I am a shell-fish just come from being saturated with the waters of the Lucrine lake, near Baiae but now I luxuriously thrust for noble pickle.
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Some good, some so-so, and lots plain bad: that's how a book of poems is made, my Friend.
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Who gives to friends so much from Fate secures, That is the only wealth for ever yours. [Lat., Extra fortunam est, quidquid donatur amicis Quas dederis, selas semper habebis opes.]
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Laugh, if thou art wise.
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Red-haired, black-lipped, club-footed, and blink-eyed if you're a good man, you're a wonder!
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Conceal a flaw, and the world will imagine the worst.
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The bee is enclosed, and shines preserved, in a tear of the sisters of Phaeton, so that it seems enshrined in its own nectar. It has obtained a worthy reward for its great toils we may suppose that the bee itself would have desired such a death.
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You should not fear, nor yet should you wish for your last day.
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He who writes distichs, wishes, I suppose, to please by brevity. But, tell me, of what avail is their brevity, when there is a whose book full of them?
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If I remember right, Aelia, you had four teeth a cough displaced two, another two more. You can now cough without anxiety all the day long. A third cough can find nothing to do in your mouth.
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Wine and women bring misery.
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Epigrams need no crier, but are content with their own tongue.
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Rarity gives a charm so early fruits and winter roses are the most prized and coyness sets off an extravagant mistress, while the door always open tempts no suitor.
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You complain, friend Swift, of the length of my epigrams, but you yourself write nothing. Yours are shorter.
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Every epigram should resemble a bee it should have sting, honey, and brevity.
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He who prefers to give Linus the half of what he wishes to borrow, rather than to lend him the whole, prefers to lose only the half.
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No hero to me is the man who, by easy shedding of his blood, purchases fame: my hero is he who, without death, can win praise.
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I do not like the man who squanders life for fame give me the man who living makes a name. [Lat., Nolo virum facili redimit qui sanquine famam Hunc volo laudari qui sine morte potest.]
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It is feeling and force of imagination that make us eloquent.
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