Results for: miserias properant suas audire miseri
Latin English
miserias properant suas audire miserithe wretched hasten to hear of their own miseries (Seneca)
audiō, audīre, audīvī, audītumhear, listen to
audire est operæ pretiumit is worth your while to hear (Horace)
et quæ sibi quisque timebat unius in miseri exitium conversa tulereand what each man feared for himself was easily borne, when it was turned to the destruction of a single wretch! (Virgil, in reference to casting lots to sacrifice one of a number of people)
etiam quæ sibi quisque timebat unius in miseri exitium conversa tulerewhat each man feared would happen to himself did not trouble him when he saw that it would ruin another (Virgil)
habet et bellum suas legeseven war has its laws
is demum miser est, cujus nobilitas miserias nobilitatwretched, indeed, is the man whose fame makes his misfortunes famous (Accius)
non convivere, nec videre saltem, non audire licet; nec urbe tota quisquam est tam prope, tam proculque nobisI may not live with him, nor even see him or hear him; in all the city there is no one so near me and so far away (Martial)
O miseri quorum gaudia crimen habent!O you wretched, whose joys are tainted with guilt! (Pseudo-Gallus)
omnibus modis, qui pauperes sunt homines miseri vivunt; præsertim quibus nec quæstus est, nec didicere artem ullamthe poor live wretchedly in every way; especially those who have no means of livelihood and have learned no craft (Plautus)
quod nimis miseri volunt, hoc facile creduntwhatever the wretched anxiously wish for, this they readily believe (Seneca)
sperate miseri, cavete feliceslet the wretched live in hope and the happy be on their guard
strangulat inclusus dolor, atque exæstuat intus, cogitur et vires multiplicare suassuppressed grief suffocates, it rages within the breast, and is forced to multiply its strength (Ovid)
tendimus huc omnes; metam properamus ad unam. Omnia sub leges mors vocat atra suaswe are all bound thither; we are hastening to the same common goal. Black death calls all things under the sway of its laws (Ovid)
 

Translations: 114 / 14

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