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Seek to make a person blush for their guilt rather than shed their blood.
Tacitus
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Tacitus
Annalist
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Gallia Bracata
Publius Cornelius Tacitus
Gaius Cornelius Tacitus
P. Cornelius Tacitus
C. Cornelius Tacitus
Cornelius Tacitus
Politics
Rather
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Blushing
Person
Blush
Make
Shed
Guilt
Seek
Blood
More quotes by Tacitus
Valor is the contempt of death and pain.
Tacitus
The more numerous the laws, the more corrupt the government.
Tacitus
Cruelty is fed, not weakened, by tears.
Tacitus
In the struggle between those seeking power there is no middle course.
Tacitus
Lust of power is the most flagrant of all the passions.
Tacitus
The grove is the centre of their whole religion. It is regarded as the cradle of the race and the dwelling-place of the supreme god to whom all things are subject and obedient.
Tacitus
Power won by crime no one ever yet turned to a good purpose.
Tacitus
So true is it that all transactions of preeminent importance are wrapt in doubt and obscurity while some hold for certain facts the most precarious hearsays, others turn facts into falsehood and both are exaggerated by posterity.
Tacitus
This I regard as history's highest function, to let no worthy action be uncommemorated, and to hold out the reprobation of posterity as a terror to evil words and deeds.
Tacitus
To abandon your shield is the basest of crimes nor may a man thus disgraced be present at the sacred rites, or enter their council many, indeed, after escaping from battle, have ended their infamy with the halter.
Tacitus
Tacitus has written an entire work on the manners of the Germans. This work is short, but it comes from the pen of Tacitus, who was always concise, because he saw everything at a glance.
Tacitus
We are corrupted by good fortune. [Lat., Felicitate corrumpimur.]
Tacitus
Style, like the human body, is specially beautiful when, so to say, the veins are not prominent, and the bones cannot be counted, but when a healthy and sound blood fills the limbs, and shows itself in the muscles, and the very sinews become beautiful under a ruddy glow and graceful outline.
Tacitus
Corruptisima republica plurimae leges.
Tacitus
Deos fortioribus adesse. The gods support those who are stronger.
Tacitus
Rumor does not always err it sometimes even elects a man.
Tacitus
Miseram pacem vel bello bene mutari. Even war is preferable to a shameful peace.
Tacitus
It is less difficult to bear misfortunes than to remain uncorrupted by pleasure.
Tacitus
War will of itself discover and lay open the hidden and rankling wounds of the victorious party.
Tacitus
[That form of] eloquence, the foster-child of licence, which fools call liberty. [Lat., Eloquentia, alumna licentiae, quam stulti libertatem vocabant.]
Tacitus