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Nature herself has never attempted to effect great changes rapidly.
Quintilian
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Quintilian
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Marcus Fabius Quintilianus
Marcus Fabius Quintilian
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More quotes by Quintilian
When defeat is inevitable, it is wisest to yield.
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Everything that has a beginning comes to an end.
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Nothing is more dangerous to men than a sudden change of fortune.
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For the mind is all the easier to teach before it is set.
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In a crowd, on a journey, at a banquet even, a line of thought can itself provide its own seclusion.
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There is no one who would not rather appear to know than to be taught.
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When we cannot hope to win, it is an advantage to yield.
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She abounds with lucious faults.
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Virtue, though she gets her beginning from nature, yet receives her finishing touches from learning.
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For comic writers charge Socrates with making the worse appear the better reason.
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Satiety is a neighbor to continued pleasures. [Lat., Continuis voluptatibus vicina satietas.]
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Prune what is turgid, elevate what is commonplace, arrange what is disorderly, introduce rhythm where the language is harsh, modify where it is too absolute.
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We should not speak so that it is possible for the audience to understand us, but so that it is impossible for them to misunderstand us.
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The soul languishing in obscurity contracts a kind of rust, or abandons itself to the chimera of presumption for it is natural for it to acquire something, even when separated from any one.
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A liar ought to have a good memory.
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It is worth while too to warn the teacher that undue severity in correcting faults is liable at times to discourage a boy's mind from effort.
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Men of quality are in the wrong to undervalue, as they often do, the practise of a fair and quick hand in writing for it is no immaterial accomplishment.
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While we ponder when to begin, it becomes too late to do.
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Whilst we deliberate how to begin a thing, it grows too late to begin it.
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For it would have been better that man should have been born dumb, nay, void of all reason, rather than that he should employ the gifts of Providence to the destruction of his neighbor.
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