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Every one can remember that which has interested himself.
Plautus
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Plautus
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Titus Maccius Plautus
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More quotes by Plautus
It is good to love in a moderate degree to distraction, it is not good but to love to entire distraction, is the thing that my master's doing.
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Courage in danger is half the battle.
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Food of Acheron. (Grave.) [Lat., Pabulum Acheruntis.]
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I know that we women are all justly accounted praters they say in the present day that there never was in any age such a wonder to be found as a dumb woman. [Lat., Nam multum loquaces merito omnes habemus, Nec mutam profecto repertam ullam esse Hodie dicunt mulierem ullo in seculo.]
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A woman smells well when she smells of nothing.
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Fortune moulds and circumscribes human affairs as she pleases. [Lat., Fortuna humana fingit artatque ut lubet.]
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I count him lost, who is lost to shame.
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Things which you do not hope happen more frequently than things which you do hope.
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Know not what you know, and see not what you see. [Lat., Etiam illud quod scies nesciveris Ne videris quod videris.]
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Little do you know what a gloriously uncertain thing law is.
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The gods confound the man who first found out How to distinguish hours! Confound him, too, Who in this place set up a sun-dial, To cut and hack my days so wretchedly Into small portions.
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Ah yes, the gods use us mortals as footballs!
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He who falls in love meets a worse fate than he who leaps from a rock.
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If you speak insults you will hear them also.
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Find me a reasonable lover against his weight in gold.
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For nobody is curious, who isn't malevolent.
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It is well for one to know more than he says.
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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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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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Slander-mongers and those who listen to slander, if I had my way, would all be strung up, the talkers by the tongue, the listeners by the ears.
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