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Lovers remember everything. [Lat., Meminerunt omnia amantes.]
Ovid
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Ovid
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Publius Ovidius Naso
P. Ovidius Naso
Lovers
Remember
Everything
Omnia
More quotes by Ovid
To be silent is but a small virtue but it is a serious fault to reveal secrets.
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Ere land and sea and the all-covering sky Were made, in the whole world the countenance Of nature was the same, all one, well named Chaos, a raw and undivided mass, Naught but a lifeless bulk, with warring seeds Of ill-joined elements compressed together.
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Giving requires good sense. [Lat., Rest est ingeniosa dare.]
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Often the prickly thorn produces tender roses.
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There is a god within us, and the heavens Have intercourse with earth from realms above That spirit comes.
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A frail gift is beauty, which grows less as time draws on, and is devoured by its own years.
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You will be safest in the middle.
Ovid
Judgement of beauty can err, what with the wine and the dark.
Ovid
The act is judged of by the event.
Ovid
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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Tis not always in a physician's power to cure the sick at times the disease is stronger than trained art.
Ovid
To give requires good sense.
Ovid
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 you call my heart affectionate, or you call it womanish: I confess, that to my misfortune, it is soft.
Ovid
Art lies by its own artifice.
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The man who has experienced shipwreck shudders even at a calm sea.
Ovid
Mad desire, when it has the most, longs for more
Ovid
The rest of the crowd were friends of my fortune, not of me. [Lat., Caetera fortunae, non mea, turba fuit.]
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Meet the disorder in the outset, the medicine may be too late, when the disease has gained ground through delay.
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There is a good deal in a man's mode of eating.
Ovid