Share
×
Inspirational Quotes
Authors
Professions
Topics
Tags
Quote
None make a greater show of sorrow than those who are most delighted.
Tacitus
Share
Change background
T
T
T
Change font
Original
TAGS & TOPICS
Tacitus
Annalist
Biographer
Historian
Jurist
Military Personnel
Philosopher
Poet
Politician
Gallia Bracata
Publius Cornelius Tacitus
Gaius Cornelius Tacitus
P. Cornelius Tacitus
C. Cornelius Tacitus
Cornelius Tacitus
Greater
Show
Shows
Make
Delighted
None
Sorrow
More quotes by Tacitus
Crime succeeds by sudden despatch honest counsels gain vigor by delay.
Tacitus
Even for learned men, love of fame is the last thing to be given up.
Tacitus
Greater things are believed of those who are absent.
Tacitus
[That form of] eloquence, the foster-child of licence, which fools call liberty. [Lat., Eloquentia, alumna licentiae, quam stulti libertatem vocabant.]
Tacitus
[The Jews have] an attitude of hostility and hatred towards all others.
Tacitus
If you would know who controls you see who you may not criticise.
Tacitus
Even honor and virtue make enemies, condemning, as they do, their opposites by too close a contrast.
Tacitus
The wicked find it easier to coalesce for seditious purposes than for concord in peace.
Tacitus
They terrify lest they should fear.
Tacitus
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.
Tacitus
The brave and bold persist even against fortune the timid and cowardly rush to despair though fear alone.
Tacitus
The powerful hold in deep remembrance an ill-timed pleasantry. [Lat., Facetiarum apud praepotentes in longum memoria est.]
Tacitus
The lust of fame is the last that a wise man shakes off.
Tacitus
Seek to make a person blush for their guilt rather than shed their blood.
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
Forethought and prudence are the proper qualities of a leader. [Lat., Ratio et consilium, propriae ducis artes.]
Tacitus
The unknown always passes for the marvellous.
Tacitus
In all things there is a law of cycles.
Tacitus
People flatter us because they can depend upon our credulity.
Tacitus
It belongs to human nature to hate those you have injured.
Tacitus