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Beauty is a frail good.
Ovid
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Ovid
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Publius Ovidius Naso
P. Ovidius Naso
Frail
Beauty
Good
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Love will enter cloaked in friendship's name.
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By arts, sails, and oars, ships are rapidly moved arts move the light chariot, and establish love. [Lat., Arte citae veloque rates remoque moventur Arte levis currus, arte regendus Amor.]
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Riches, the incentives to evil, are dug out of the earth.
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The glow of inspiration warms us this holy rapture springs from the seeds of the Divine mind sown in man.
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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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It is ill to marry in the month of May.
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The mind conscious of innocence despises false reports: but we are a set always ready to believe a scandal.
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If thou wouldst marry wisely, marry thine equal.
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We two [Deucalion and Pyrrha, after the deluge] form a multitude. [Lat., Nos duo turba sumus.]
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Nothing is swifter than our years.
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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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It's useful that there should be Gods, so let's believe there are.
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Anything cracked will shatter at a touch.
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These are the evils which result from gossiping habits.
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The lamp burns bright when wick and oil are clean.
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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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Jupiter from on high smiles at the perjuries of lovers.
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Wind feeds the fire, and wind extinguishes: The flames are nourished by a gentle breeze, Yet, if it stronger grows, they sink and die.
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The mind is sicker than the sick body in contemplation of its sufferings it becomes hopeless. [Lat., Corpore sed mens est aegro magis aegra malique In circumspectu stat sine fine sui.]
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The end doesn't justify the means.
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