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If you are content, you have enough to live comfortably.
Plautus
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Plautus
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Titus Maccius Plautus
Comfortably
Contentment
Content
Live
Enough
More quotes by Plautus
There can be no profit, if the outlay exceeds it. [Non enim potest quaestus consistere, si eum sumptus superat.]
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I am myself my own commander. [Lat., Egomet sum mihi imperator.]
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No man will be respected by others who is despised by his own relatives.
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He whom the gods love dies young, whilst he is full of health, perception, and judgment. [Lat., Quem dii diligunt, Adolescens moritur, dum valet, sentit, sapit.]
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It is easier to begin well than to finish well.
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A contented mind is the best source for trouble.
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You have eaten a meal dangerously seasoned. [You have laid up a grief in store for yourself.]
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You love a nothing when you love an ingrate.
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For nobody is curious, who isn't malevolent.
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Confidence begets confidence. Courage, an independent spark from heaven's bright throne, By which the soul stands raised, triumphant, high, alone. Courage in danger is half the battle.
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Nothing is more annoying than a tardy friend. [Lat., Tardo amico nihil est quidquam iniquius.]
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That man will never be unwelcome to others who makes himself agreeable to his own family.
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Without feathers it isn't easy to fly: my wings have got no feathers. [Lat., Sine pennis volare hau facilest: meae alae pennas non habent.] [Alt., Flying without feathers is not easy my wings have no feathers.]
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Man's fortune is usually changed at once life is changeable. [Lat., Actutum fortunae solent mutarier varia vita est.]
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Feast to-day makes fast to-morrow. [Lat., Festo die si quid prodegeris, Profesto egere liceat nisi peperceris.]
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In everything the middle road is best.
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Every one can remember that which has interested himself.
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A well-balanced mind is the best remedy against affliction.
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In wondrous ways do the gods make sport with men. [Lat., Miris modis Di ludos faciunt hominibus.]
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It well becomes a young man to be modest.
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