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A thousand ills require a thousand cures.
Ovid
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Ovid
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Publius Ovidius Naso
P. Ovidius Naso
Ills
Require
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Thousand
More quotes by Ovid
You will be safest in the middle.
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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.]
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Let the man who does not wish to be idle, fall in love.
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For this reason, if you believe proverbs, let me tell you the common one: It is unlucky to marry in May.
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Nothing is more powerful than custom or habit.
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When you have set yourself a task finish it.
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everything changes, nothing perishes
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You can learn from anyone even your enemy.
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Every one who repeats it adds something to the scandal. [The rolling snow-ball.]
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In your judgment virtue requires no reward, and is to be sought for itself, unaccompanied by external benefits. [Lat., Judice te mercede caret, per seque petenda est Externis virtus incomitata bonis.]
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What is more useful than fire? Yet if any one prepares to burn a house, it is with fire that he arms his daring hands.
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Courage conquers all things: it even gives strength to the body.
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Struggling over my fickle heart, love draws it now this way, and now hate that--but love, I think, is winning. I will hate, if I have strength if not, I shall love unwilling.
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There is no pleasure pure and simple, and some care always comes to mar our joys.
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He who sins easily, sins less. The very power Renders less vigorous the roots of evil.
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Put faith in one who's had experience.
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Skill makes love unending.
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By constant dripping, water hollows stone, A signet-ring from use alone grows thin, And the curved plowshare by soft earth is worn.
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Either you pursue or push, O Sisyphus, the stone destined to keep rolling. [Lat., Aut petis aut urgues ruiturum, Sisyphe, saxum.]
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Fair peace becomes men ferocious anger belongs to beasts. [Lat., Candida pax homines, trux decet ira feras.]
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