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If you want to be loved, love.
Seneca the Elder
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Seneca the Elder
Historian
Philosopher
Poet
Rhetorician
Writer
Córdoba
Andalusia
Annaeus Seneca maior
Loved
Love
Life
More quotes by Seneca the Elder
It is not death we fear, but the thought of it.
Seneca the Elder
For the great benefits of our being- our life, health, and reason-we look upon ourselves.
Seneca the Elder
Know this, that he that is a friend to himself, is a friend to all men.
Seneca the Elder
Unhappy is the man, though he rule the world, who doesn't consider himself supremely blessed. In order to consider himself supremely blessed he must deeply understand that things could be much worse but aren't! To not do that is to always be less happy than he could be.
Seneca the Elder
The conditions of conquest are always easy. We have but to toil awhile, endure awhile, believe always, and never turn back
Seneca the Elder
What is the proper limit for wealth? It is, first, to have what is necessary and, second, to have what is enough.
Seneca the Elder
We are more often frightened than hurt and we suffer more from imagination than from reality.
Seneca the Elder
The courts of kings are full of people, but empty of friends.
Seneca the Elder
It is not manly to turn one's back on fortune.
Seneca the Elder
The mind is slow to unlearn what it learnt early.
Seneca the Elder
No one is better born than another, unless they are born with better abilities and a more amiable disposition.
Seneca the Elder
You can end love more easily than you can moderate it.
Seneca the Elder
Unhappy is the man, though he rule the world, who doesn't consider himself supremely blessed.
Seneca the Elder
There is no person so severely punished, as those who subject themselves to the whip of their own remorse.
Seneca the Elder
There's some end at last for the man who follows a path mere rambling is interminable.
Seneca the Elder
No evil is without its compensation ... it is not the loss itself, but the estimate of the loss, that troubles us.
Seneca the Elder
We should every night call ourselves to an account: What infirmity have I mastered today? What passions opposed! What temptation resisted? What virtue acquired?
Seneca the Elder
Malice drinks one-half of its own poison.
Seneca the Elder
No man will swim ashore and take his baggage with him.
Seneca the Elder
Nothing is our except time.
Seneca the Elder