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It is the sign of a weak mind to be unable to bear wealth.
Seneca the Younger
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Seneca the Younger
Aphorist
Philosopher
Playwright
Poet
Politician
Statesperson
Writer
Córdoba
Andalusia
Lucius Annaeus Seneca
Seneca the Younger
the Younger Seneca
Lucio Anneo Seneca
Annaeus Seneca
Lucius Annaeus Seneca minor
Lucius Annaeus Seneca Iunior
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Bear
Bears
Weak
Wealth
Money
Mind
Unable
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It is the power of the mind to be unconquerable.
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Humanity is fortunate, because no man is unhappy except by his own fault.
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We are born subjects, and to obey God is perfect liberty. He that does this shall be free, safe and happy.
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Truths open to everyone, and the claims aren't all staked yet.
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The spirit in which a thing is given determines that in which the debt is acknowledged it's the intention, not the face-value of the gift, that's weighed.
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I am telling you to be a slow-speaking person.
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We must take care to live not merely a long life, but a full one for living a long life requires only good fortune, but living a full life requires character. Long is the life that is fully lived it is fulfilled only when the mind supplies its own good qualities and empowers itself from within.
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Nature ever provides for her own exigencies.
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Virtue depends partly upon training and partly upon practice you must learn first, and then strengthen your learning by action. If this be true, not only do the doctrines of wisdom help us but the precepts also, which check and banish our emotions by a sort of official decree.
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Behold a contest worthy of a god, a brave man matched in conflict with adversity.
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We deliberate about the parcels of life, but not about life itself, and so we arrive all unawares at its different epochs, and have the trouble of beginning all again. And so finally it is that we do not walk as men confidently towards death, but let death come suddenly upon us.
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Fidelity bought with money is overcome by money.
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Let not the enjoyment of pleasures now within your grasp, be carried to such excess as to incapacitate you from future repetition.
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There has never been any great genius without a spice of madness.
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We haven't time to spare to hear whether it was between Italy and Sicily that he ran into a storm or somewhere outside the world we know-when every day we're running into our own storms, spiritual storms, and driven by vice into all the troubles that Ulysses ever knew.
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