Results for: quid furor est census corpore ferre suo!
Latin English
quid furor est census corpore ferre suo!what madness it is to carry one’s fortune on one’s back! (Ovid)
accipe nunc, victus tenuis quid quantaque secum afferat. In primis valeas benenow learn what and how great benefit a moderate diet brings with it. Before all, you will enjoy good health (Horace)
ad nullum consurgit opus, cum corpore languetwhen the body is indisposed, it is in vain that we call on the mind for any strenuous application (Gallus)
ante, inquit, cicumspiciendum est, cum quibos edas et bibas, quam quid edas et bibashe (Epicurus) says that you should rather have regard to the company with whom you eat and drink, than to what you eat and drink (Seneca)
at ingenium, ingens inculto latet hoc sub corporeyet under this rough exterior lies concealed a mighty genius (Horace)
auri sacra fames quid non?what does the accursed greed for gold not drive men to do?
aurum vis hominemne? Habeas? Hominem?, quid ad aurum?the man or his gold? Which will you take? The man?, when you could have the gold? (Lucilius)
Cave quid dicis, quando, et cuiBeware what you say, when, and to whom
caveant consules ne quid res publica detrimenti caperetlet the consuls see to it that no harm come to the Republic (after Cæsar Augustus)
censusproperty /census
censuswealth, property /census
cignoni non sine causa Apoloni dicata sint, quod ab eo divinationem habere videantur, qua providentes quid in morte boni sit, cum cantu et voluptate morianturthe swan is not dedicated to Apollo without cause, because foreseeing his happiness in death, he dies with singing and pleasure (Cicero)
corpore sed mens est ægro magis ægra; malique in circumspectu stat sine fine suithe mind is sicker than the sick body; in contemplation of its sufferings it becomes hopeless (Ovid)
cuicunque aliquis quid concedit, concedere videtur et id, sine quo res ipsa esse non potestto whomsoever someone grants a thing, the same one grants that without which the thing cannot be enjoyed (i.e., the use of something is implied in the giving of it)
cum corpore mentem crescere sentimus pariterque senescerewe find that, as the mind strengthens with the body, it decays with it in like manner (Lucretius)
 

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