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If you are wise, be wise keep what goods the gods provide you.
Plautus
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Plautus
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Titus Maccius Plautus
Gods
Provide
Wise
Keep
Goods
More quotes by Plautus
I am undone! I have smashed the waggon. [I have ruined all.]
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He who tries to protect himself from deception is often cheated, even when most on his guard.
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Because those, who twit others with their faults, should look at home.
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The evil that we know is best.
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It does not matter a feather whether a man be supported by patron or client, if he himself wants courage. [Lat., Animus tamen omnia vincit. Ille etiam vires corpus habere facit.]
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Vulgarity of manners defiles fine garments more than mud.
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For enemies carry about slander not in the form in which it took its rise . The scandal of men is everlasting even then does it survive when you would suppose it to be dead.
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Courage is to take hard knocks like a man when occasion calls.
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Where there are friends there is wealth.
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Fortune moulds and circumscribes human affairs as she pleases. [Lat., Fortuna humana fingit artatque ut lubet.]
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Let not your expenditure exceed your income.
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All good men and women should be on their guard to avoid guilt, and even the suspicion of it.
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A good disposition I far prefer to gold for gold is the gift of fortune goodness of disposition is the gift of nature. I prefer much rather to be called good than fortunate.
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Good merchandise, even hidden, soon finds buyers.
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This is the great fault of wine it first trips up the feet: it is a cunning wrestler.
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To an honest man, it is an honor to have remembered his duty.
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He who falls in love meets a worse fate than he who leaps from a rock.
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Fortitude is a great help in distress.
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You love a nothing when you love an ingrate.
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Keep what you have got the known evil is best. [Lat., Habeas ut nactus nota mala res optima est.]
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