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Skill makes love unending.
Ovid
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Ovid
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Publius Ovidius Naso
P. Ovidius Naso
Skills
Makes
Love
Unending
Skill
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A woman is always buying something.
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It is ill to marry in the month of May.
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Sleep, thou repose of all things sleep, thou gentlest of the deities thou peace of the mind, from which care flies who doest soothe the hearts of men wearied with the toils of the day, and refittest them for labor.
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A field becomes exhausted by constant tillage.
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What is hid is unknown: for what is unknown there is no desire. [Lat., Quod latet ignotum est ignoti nulla cupido.]
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There is a deity within us who breathes that divine fire by which we are animated.
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Leave war to others 'tis Protesilaus' part of love.
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Our integrity is never worth so much as when we have parted with our all to keep it.
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May you live unenvied, and pass many pleasant years unknown to fame and also have congenial friends. [Lat., Vive sine invidia, mollesque inglorius annos Exige amicitias et tibi junge pares.]
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Poetry comes fine-spun from a mind at peace.
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Thou beginnest better than thou endest. The last is inferior to the first. [Lat., Coepisti melius quam desinis. Ultima primis cedunt.]
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Winged time glides on insensibly, and deceive us and there is nothing more fleeting than years.
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There is a good deal in a man's mode of eating.
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The sick mind can not bear anything harsh. [Lat., Mensque pati durum sustinet aegra nihil.]
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Dear to girls' hearts is their own beauty.
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