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The need has gone the memorial thereof remains.
Ovid
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Ovid
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Publius Ovidius Naso
P. Ovidius Naso
Thereof
Memorial
Remains
Gone
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Needs
More quotes by Ovid
Beauty is a frail good.
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Truly now is the golden age the highest honour comes by means of gold by gold love is procured.
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It's right to learn, even from the enemy.
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Love fed fat soon turns to boredom.
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What is it that love does to a woman? Without she only sleeps with it alone, she lives.
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A field becomes exhausted by constant tillage.
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Beauty, if you do not open your doors, takes age from lack of use.
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O fool, what else is sleep but chill death's likeness?
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There is some joy in weeping. For our tears Fill up the cup, then wash our pain away.
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To dismiss a guest is a more ungracious act than not to admit him at all.
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Man should ever look to his last day, and no one should be called happy before his funeral. [Lat., Ultima semper Expectanda dies homini est, dicique beatus Ante obitum nemo et suprema funera debet.]
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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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It is something to hold the scepter with a firm hand. [Lat., Est aliquid valida sceptra tenere manu.]
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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.
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Anything cracked will shatter at a touch.
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A gift in time of need is most acceptable.
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An injury may prove a blessing.
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The rest of the crowd were friends of my fortune, not of me. [Lat., Caetera fortunae, non mea, turba fuit.]
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That fair face will as years roll on lose its beauty, and old age will bring its wrinkles to the brow.
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The raven once in snowy plumes was drest, White as the whitest dove's unsullied breast, Fair as the guardian of the Capitol, Soft as the swan a large and lovely fowl His tongue, his prating tongue had changed him quite To sooty blackness from the purest white.
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