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A lesson that is never learned can never be too often taught.
Seneca the Younger
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Seneca the Younger
Aphorist
Philosopher
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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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More quotes by Seneca the Younger
It's not that we have a short time to live, but that we waste a lot of it.
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Life, if thou knowest how to use it, is long enough.
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Poverty wants some, luxury many, and avarice all things.
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A good conscience fears no witness, but a guilty conscience is solicitous even in solitude. If we do nothing but what is honest, let all the world know it. But if otherwise, what does it signify to have nobody else know it, so long as I know it myself? Miserable is he who slights that witness.
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The best cure for anger is delay.
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The man who while he gives thinks of what he will get in return, deserves to be deceived.
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The mind makes the nobleman, and uplifts the lowly to high degree.
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That poverty is no disaster is understood by everyone who has not yet succumbed to the madness of greed and luxury that turns everything topsy-turvy.
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To the person who does not know where he wants to go there is no favorable wind.
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Expediency often silences justice.
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It is only the surprise and newness of the thing which makes that misfortune terrible which by premeditation might be made easy to us. For that which some people make light by sufferance, others do by foresight.
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While you teach, you learn.
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In the meantime, cling tooth and nail to the following rule: not to give in to adversity, not to trust prosperity, and always take full note of fortune's habit of behaving just as she pleases.
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Time is the greatest remedy for anger.
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I would rather be sick than idle.
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The bravest sight in the world is to see a great man struggling against adversity.
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Do what you should, not what you may.
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Extreme remedies are never the first to be resorted to.
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The body is not a permanent dwelling, but a sort of inn which is to be left behind when one perceives that one is a burden to the host.
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It is easy enough to arouse in a listener a desire for what is honorable for in every one of us nature has laid the foundations or sown the seeds of the virtues. We are born to them all, all of us, and when a person comes along with the necessary stimulus, then those qualities of the personality are awakened, so to speak, from their slumber.
Seneca the Younger