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Anyone can be rich in promises.
Ovid
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Ovid
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Publius Ovidius Naso
P. Ovidius Naso
Rich
Anyone
Promises
Promise
More quotes by Ovid
It is good to be taught even by an enemy
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There is no brotherhood between love and dignity, Nor can they share the same abode.
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Minds that are ill at ease are agitated by both hope and fear.
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Envy, slothful vice, Never makes its way in lofty characters, But, like the skulking viper, creeps and crawls Close to the ground.
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Though the strength is lacking, yet the willingness is commendable.
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He is a foolish swimmer who swims against the stream, when he might take the current sideways.
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Let the man who does not wish to be idle, fall in love.
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Well has he lived who has lived well in obscurity.
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Love fed fat soon turns to boredom.
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Love is a credulous thing.
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Time itself flows on with constant motion, just like a river: for no more than a river can the fleeting hour stand still. As wave is driven on by wave, and, itself pursued, pursues the one before, so the moments of time at once flee and follow, and are ever new.
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Whether they yield or refuse, it delights women to have been asked.
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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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Treat a thousand dispositions in a thousand ways.
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A pleasing countenance is no slight disadvantage. [Lat., Auxilium non leve vultus habet.]
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The high-spirited man may indeed die, but he will not stoop to meanness. Fire, though it may be quenched, will not become cool.
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If the art is concealed, it succeeds.
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When all the other animals, downcast looked upon the earth, he [Prometheus] gave a face raised on high to man, and commanded him to see the sky and raise his high eyes to the stars.
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Every one who repeats it adds something to the scandal. [The rolling snow-ball.]
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Tis best to be silent in a bad cause.
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