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Laws were most numerous when the commonwealth was most corrupt
Tacitus
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Tacitus
Annalist
Biographer
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Military Personnel
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Gallia Bracata
Publius Cornelius Tacitus
Gaius Cornelius Tacitus
P. Cornelius Tacitus
C. Cornelius Tacitus
Cornelius Tacitus
Numerous
Corrupt
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Laws
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Commonwealth
More quotes by Tacitus
Bottling up his malice to be suppressed and brought out with increased violence.
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It is the rare fortune of these days that one may think what one likes and say what one thinks.
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The lust of fame is the last that a wise man shakes off.
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Viewed from a distance, everything is beautiful.
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Indeed, the crowning proof of their valour and their strength is that they keep up their superiority without harm to others.
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A desire to resist oppression is implanted in the nature of man.
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Posterity allows to every man his true value and proper honours.
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The desire for glory clings even to the best men longer than any other passion.
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Flattery labors under the odious charge of servility.
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Even for learned men, love of fame is the last thing to be given up.
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Traitors are hated even by those whom they prefer.
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The images of twenty of the most illustrious families the Manlii, the Quinctii, and other names of equal splendour were carried before it [the bier of Junia]. Those of Brutus and Cassius were not displayed but for that very reason they shone with pre-eminent lustre.
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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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The lust of dominion burns with a flame so fierce as to overpower all other affections of the human breast.
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Kindness, so far as we can return it, is agreeable.
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A bitter jest, when it comes too near the truth, leaves a sharp sting behind it.
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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.
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Eloquence wins its great and enduring fame quite as much from the benches of our opponents as from those of our friends.
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Be assured those will be thy worst enemies, not to whom thou hast done evil, but who have done evil to thee. And those will be thy best friends, not to whom thou hast done good, but who have done good to thee.
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