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Literature is both my joy and my comfort: it can add to every happiness and there is no sorrow it cannot console.
Pliny the Younger
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Pliny the Younger
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C. Plinius Caecilius Secundus
Gaius Plinius Caecilius Secundus
the Younger Pliny
Literature
Happiness
Cannot
Writing
Console
Every
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Sorrow
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More quotes by Pliny the Younger
That indolent but agreeable condition of doing nothing.
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There is no book so bad that it is not profitable in some part. -Nullus est liber tam malus ut non aliqua parte prosit
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They enhance the value of their favors by the words with which they are accompanied.
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It is better to excel in any single art than to arrive only at mediocrity in several, so moderate skill in several is to be preferred where one cannot attain to perfection in any.
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Unfinished paintings are more admired than the finished because the artist's actual thoughts are left visible.
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Too much polishing weakens rather than improves a work.
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For however often a man may receive an obligation from you, if you refuse a request, all former favors are effaced by this one denial.
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Objects which are usually the motives of our travels by land and by sea are often overlooked and neglected if they lie under our eye.
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Fear is a feeling that is stronger than love.
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It is wonderful how the mind is stirred and quickened into activity by brisk bodily exercise.
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He [Pliny the Elder] used to say that 'no book [etc] was so bad but some good might be got out of it'.
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So we must work at our profession and not make anybody else's idleness an excuse for our own. There is no lack of readers and listeners it is for us to produce something worth being written and heard.
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There were some so afraid of death that they prayed for death.
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The happier time, the quicker it passes
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Everyone is prejudiced in favor of his own powers of discernment.
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And as in men's bodies, so in government, that disease is most serious which proceeds from the head.
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