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It belongs to human nature to hate those you have injured.
Tacitus
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Tacitus
Annalist
Biographer
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Military Personnel
Philosopher
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Politician
Gallia Bracata
Publius Cornelius Tacitus
Gaius Cornelius Tacitus
P. Cornelius Tacitus
C. Cornelius Tacitus
Cornelius Tacitus
Politics
Hate
Nature
Human
Humans
Injured
Despise
Belongs
Anger
More quotes by Tacitus
It is a characteristic of the human mind to hate the man one has injured.
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Laws were most numerous when the commonwealth was most corrupt
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We are corrupted by good fortune. [Lat., Felicitate corrumpimur.]
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We see many who are struggling against adversity who are happy, and more although abounding in wealth, who are wretched.
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You might believe a good man easily, a great man with pleasure. -Bonum virum facile crederes, magnum libenter
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Even for learned men, love of fame is the last thing to be given up.
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They make solitude, which they call peace.
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Yet the age was not so utterly destitute of virtues but that it produced some good examples. [Lat., Non tamen adeo virtutum sterile seculum, ut non et bona exempla prodiderit.]
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They terrify lest they should fear.
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The powerful hold in deep remembrance an ill-timed pleasantry. [Lat., Facetiarum apud praepotentes in longum memoria est.]
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The wicked find it easier to coalesce for seditious purposes than for concord in peace.
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Perdomita Britannia et statim omissa. Britain was conquered and immediately lost.
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The sciences throw an inexpressible grace over our compositions, even where they are not immediately concerned as their effects are discernible where we least expect to find them.
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The brave and bold persist even against fortune the timid and cowardly rush to despair though fear alone.
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There was more courage in bearing trouble than in escaping from it the brave and the energetic cling to hope, even in spite of fortune the cowardly and the indolent are hurried by their fears,' said Plotius Firmus, Roman Praetorian Guard.
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Valor is the contempt of death and pain.
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It is common, to esteem most what is most unknown.
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Rumor does not always err it sometimes even elects a man.
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Every great example of punishment has in it some injustice, but the suffering individual is compensated by the public good.
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Legions and fleets are not such sure bulwarks of imperial power as a numerous family
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