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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.
Pliny the Younger
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Pliny the Younger
Author
Historian
Lawyer
Military Personnel
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C. Plinius Caecilius Secundus
Gaius Plinius Caecilius Secundus
the Younger Pliny
Often
Request
May
Denial
Men
Favors
Receive
Obligation
Former
Refuse
However
Effaced
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Everyone is prejudiced in favor of his own powers of discernment.
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That indolent but agreeable condition of doing nothing.
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It is wonderful how the mind is stirred and quickened into activity by brisk bodily exercise.
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There were some so afraid of death that they prayed for death.
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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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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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Too much polishing weakens rather than improves a work.
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