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You learn to know a pilot in a storm.
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
Pilots
Storm
Philosophical
Learn
Pilot
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It is a youthful failing to be unable to control one's impulses.
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To strive with an equal is dangerous with a superior, mad with an inferior, degrading.
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Most powerful is he who has himself in his own power.
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It is a tedious thing to be always beginning life they live badly who always begin to live.
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To the believers it is true. To the wise it is false. To the leaders it is useful.
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Shame may restrain what law does not prohibit.
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In every good man a God doth dwell.
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Choose as a guide one whom you will admire more when you see him act than when you hear him speak.
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Death's the discharge of our debt of sorrow.
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Nothing will ever please me, no matter how excellent or beneficial, if I must retain the knowledge of it to myself. . . . . . No good thing is pleasant to possess, without friends to share it.
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It is not how many books thou hast, but how good careful reading profiteth, while that which is full of variety delighteth.
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Why does no one confess his sins? Because he is yet in them. It is for a man who has awoke from sleep to tell his dreams.
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He who has made a fair compact with poverty is rich.
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Nothing is more disgraceful than that an old man should have nothing to show to prove that he has lived long, except his years.
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The man who has learned to triumph over sorrow wears his miseries as though they were sacred fillets upon his brow and nothing is so entirely admirable as a man bravely wretched.
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Many men provoke others to overreach them by excessive suspicion their extraordinary distrust in some sort justifies the deceit.
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Humanity is fortunate, because no man is unhappy except by his own fault.
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