Share
×
Inspirational Quotes
Authors
Professions
Topics
Tags
Quote
The sharp thorn often produces delicate roses.
Ovid
Share
Change background
T
T
T
Change font
Original
TAGS & TOPICS
Ovid
Author
Elegist
Mythographer
Poet
Writer
Publius Ovidius Naso
P. Ovidius Naso
Produce
Thorn
Often
Ancestry
Roses
Sharp
Produces
Delicate
Rose
Flower
More quotes by Ovid
Knowest thou not that kings have long hands? [Lat., An nescis longos regibus esse manus?]
Ovid
The battle is over when the foe has fallen.
Ovid
Giving requires good sense. [Lat., Rest est ingeniosa dare.]
Ovid
Death is less bitter punishment than death's delay.
Ovid
Nothing is swifter than our years.
Ovid
Skilled in every trick, a worthy heir of his paternal craft, he would make black look like white, and white look black. [Lat., Furtum ingeniosus ad omne, Qui facere assueret, patriae non degener artis, Candida de nigris, et de candentibus atra.]
Ovid
That you may please others you must be forgetful of yourself.
Ovid
Meet the disorder in the outset, the medicine may be too late, when the disease has gained ground through delay.
Ovid
I hate, and yet must love the thing I hate.
Ovid
A lover fears all that he believes.
Ovid
The end doesn't justify the means.
Ovid
Thou fool, what is sleep but the image of death? Fate will give an eternal rest. [Lat., Stulte, quid est somnus, gelidae nisi mortis imago? Longa quiescendi tempora fata dabunt.]
Ovid
You who seek an end of love, love yields to business: be busy, and you will be safe.
Ovid
Man's last day must ever be awaited and none to be counted happy until his death, until his last funeral rites are paid.
Ovid
Alluring pleasure is said to have softened the savage dispositions (of early mankind). [Lat., Blanda truces animos fertur mollisse voluptas.]
Ovid
Love is a kind of warfare.
Ovid
The workmanship was better than the subject matter.
Ovid
It is ill to marry in the month of May.
Ovid
He who has it in his power to commit sin, is less inclined to do so. The very idea of being able, weakens the desire.
Ovid
A thousand ills require a thousand cures.
Ovid