Seneca (Seneca the Elder) Quotes

Seneca (Seneca the Elder) Quotes. Below is a collection of famous Seneca (Seneca the Elder) quotes. Here you can find the most popular and greatest quotes by Seneca (Seneca the Elder). Share these quotations with your friends and family.

What were once vices are the fashion of the day.

By Seneca (Seneca the Elder)
Why do people not confess vices? It is because they have not yet laid them aside. It is a waking person only who can tell their dreams.

By Seneca (Seneca the Elder)
Calamity is virtue's opportunity.

By Seneca (Seneca the Elder)
Whenever you hold a fellow creature in distress, remember that he is a man.

By Seneca (Seneca the Elder)
When ever the speech is corrupted so is the mind.

By Seneca (Seneca the Elder)
What madness it is for a man to starve himself to enrich his heir, and so turn a friend into an enemy! For his joy at your death will be proportioned to what you leave him.

By Seneca (Seneca the Elder)
Whatever has overstepped its due bounds is always in a state of instability.

By Seneca (Seneca the Elder)
Remove severe restraint and what will become of virtue?

By Seneca (Seneca the Elder)
We all sorely complain of the shortness of time, and yet have much more than we know what to do with. Our lives are either spent in doing nothing at all, or in doing nothing to the purpose, or in doing nothing that we ought to do. We are always complaining that our days are few, and acting as though there would be no end of them.

By Seneca (Seneca the Elder)
It's the admirer and the watcher who provoke us to all the inanities we commit.

By Seneca (Seneca the Elder)
Authority founded on injustice is never of long duration.

By Seneca (Seneca the Elder)
He is the most powerful who has himself, in his power.

By Seneca (Seneca the Elder)
If you sit in judgment, investigate, if you sit in supreme power, sit in command.

By Seneca (Seneca the Elder)
The courts of kings are full of people, but empty of friends.

By Seneca (Seneca the Elder)
So enjoy present pleasures as to not mar those to come.

By Seneca (Seneca the Elder)
If you live according to the dictates of nature, you will never be poor; if according to the notions of man, you will never be rich.

By Seneca (Seneca the Elder)
The mind is a matter over every kind of fortune; itself acts in both ways, being the cause of its own happiness and misery.

By Seneca (Seneca the Elder)
Who can hope for nothing, should despair for nothing.

By Seneca (Seneca the Elder)
It is the superfluous things for which men sweat.

By Seneca (Seneca the Elder)
Freedom is not being a slave to any circumstance, to any constraint, to any chance; it means compelling Fortune to enter the lists on equal terms.

By Seneca (Seneca the Elder)
He who has injured thee was stronger or weaker than thee. If weaker, spare him; if stronger, spare thyself.

By Seneca (Seneca the Elder)
He who repents of having sinned is almost innocent.

By Seneca (Seneca the Elder)
The sun also shines on the wicked.

By Seneca (Seneca the Elder)
The road to learning by precept is long, but by example short and effective.

By Seneca (Seneca the Elder)
No evil is without its compensation. The less money, the less trouble; the less favor, the less envy. Even in those cases which put us out of wits, it is not the loss itself, but the estimate of the loss that troubles us.

By Seneca (Seneca the Elder)
The pleasures of the palate deal with us like the Egyptian thieves, who strangle those whom they embrace.

By Seneca (Seneca the Elder)
Most men ebb and flow in wretchedness between the fear of death and the hardship of life; they are unwilling to live, and yet they do not know how to die.

By Seneca (Seneca the Elder)
The final hour when we cease to exist does not itself bring death; it merely of itself completes the death-process. We reach death at that moment, but we have been a long time on the way.

By Seneca (Seneca the Elder)
Many shed tears merely for show, and have dry eyes when no one's around to observe them.

By Seneca (Seneca the Elder)
Conversation has a kind of charm about it, an insinuating and insidious something that elicits secrets just like love or liquor.

By Seneca (Seneca the Elder)