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For comic writers charge Socrates with making the worse appear the better reason.
Quintilian
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Quintilian
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Marcus Fabius Quintilianus
Marcus Fabius Quintilian
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Socrates
More quotes by Quintilian
It is fitting that a liar should be a man of good memory.
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Write quickly and you will never write well write well, and you will soon write quickly.
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Nature herself has never attempted to effect great changes rapidly.
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Usage is the best language teacher.
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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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Satiety is a neighbor to continued pleasures. [Lat., Continuis voluptatibus vicina satietas.]
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Conscience is a thousand witnesses.
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Medicine for the dead is too late
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An evil-speaker differs from an evil-doer only in the want of opportunity.
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Without natural gifts technical rules are useless.
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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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From writing rapidly it does not result that one writes well, but from writing well it results that one writes rapidly.
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It is the nurse that the child first hears, and her words that he will first attempt to imitate.
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Those who wish to appear learned to fools, appear as fools to the learned.
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Ambition is a vice, but it may be the father of virtue.
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Nothing can be pleasing which is not also becoming.
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One thing, however, I must premise, that without the assistance of natural capacity, rules and precepts are of no efficacy.
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Whilst we deliberate how to begin a thing, it grows too late to begin it.
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We excuse our sloth under the pretext of difficulty.
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The pretended admission of a fault on our part creates an excellent impression.
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