Quotes Seneca the Younger

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If one does not know to which port one is sailing, no wind is favorable.
If one does not know to which port one is sailing, no wind is favorable.
One of the most beautiful qualities of true friendship is to understand and to be understood.
Luck is what happens when preparation meets opportunity.
The conditions of conquest are always easy. We have but to toil awhile, endure awhile, believe always, and never turn back.
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Begin at once to live and count each separate day as a separate life.
The mind unlearns with difficulty what it has long learned.
Most powerful is he who has himself in his own power.
No man was ever wise by chance.
Friendship always benefits; love sometimes injures.
There is no great genius without some touch of madness.
There is no great genius without some touch of madness.
The greatest remedy for anger is delay.
Things that were hard to bear are sweet to remember.
The deep waters of time will flow over us: only a few men of genius will lift a head above the surface, and though doomed eventually to pass into the same silence, will fight against oblivion and for a long time hold their own.
Of war men ask the outcome, not the cause.
If you expect the wise man to be as angry as the baseness of crimes requires, then he must not only be angry but go insane.
Fate rules the affairs of men, with no recognizable order.
As the mother's womb holds us for ten months, making us ready, not for the womb itself, but for life, just so, through our lives, we are making ourselves ready for another birth...Therefore look forward without fear to that appointed hour- the last hour of the body, but not of the soul...That day, which you fear as being the end of all things, is the birthday of your eternity.
A sword by itself does not slay; it is merely the weapon used by the slayer.
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Men love their country, not because it is great, but because it is their own.
Men love their country, not because it is great, but because it is their own.
That moderation which nature prescribes, which limits our desires by resources restricted to our needs, has abandoned the field; it has now come to this -- that to want only what is enough is a sign both of boorishness and of utter destitution.