Плиний Младший цитаты
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Пли́ний Мла́дший — древнеримский политический деятель и писатель, адвокат.

✵ 61 н.э. – 113   •   Другие имена Plinio il Giovane
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“Character lies more concealed, and out of the reach of common observation.”
Vita hominum altos recessus magnasque latebras habet.

Letter 3, 6.
Letters, Book III

“To all this, his illustrious mind reflects the noblest ornament; he places no part of his happiness in ostentation, but refers the whole of it to conscience; and seeks the reward of a virtuous action, not in the applauses of the world, but in the action itself.”
Ornat haec magnitudo animi, quae nihil ad ostentationem, omnia ad conscientiam refert recteque facti non ex populi sermone mercedem, sed ex facto petit.

Letter 22, 5.
Letters, Book I

“Oblige people never so often, and, if you deny them on a single point, they remember nothing but that refusal.”
Quamlibet saepe obligati, si quid unum neges, hoc solum meminerunt quod negatum est.

Letter 4, 6.
Letters, Book III

“Those who are actuated by the desire of fame and glory are amazingly gratified by approbation and praise, even though it comes from their inferiors.”
Omnes enim, qui gloria famaque ducuntur, mirum in modum assensio et laus a minoribus etiam profecta delectat.

Letter 12, 6.
Letters, Book IV

“He died full of years and of glory.”
Plenus annis abit, plenus honoribus.

Letter 1, 7.
Letters, Book II

“The day, even when it is at the longest, is quickly spent.”
Quamquam longissimus, dies cito conditur.

Letter 36, 4.
Letters, Book IX

“I am sensible how much nobler it is to place the reward of virtue in the silent approbation of one's own breast than in the applause of the world. Glory ought to be the consequence, not the motive of our actions.”
Meminimus quanto maiore animo honestatis fructus in conscientia quam in fama reponatur. Sequi enim gloria, non appeti debet.

Letter 8, 14.
Letters, Book I

“For there is a certain luxury in grief; especially when we pour out our sorrows in the bosom of a friend, who will approve, or, at least, pardon our tears.”
Est enim quaedam etiam dolendi voluptas, praesertim si in amici sinu defleas, apud quem lacrimis tuis vel laus sit parata vel venia.

Letter 16, 5.
Letters, Book VIII

“Votes go by number, not weight; nor can it be otherwise in assemblies of this kind, where nothing is more unequal than that equality which prevails in them.”
Numerantur enim sententiae, non ponderantur; nec aliud in publico consilio potest fieri, in quo nihil est tam inaequale quam aequalitas ipsa.

Letter 12, 5.
Letters, Book II

“He used to say that "no book was so bad but that some good might be got out of it."”
Dicere etiam solebat nullum esse librum tam malum ut non aliqua parte prodesset..

Letter 5, 10, referring to Pliny the Elder.
Letters, Book III

“For the malicious, is not, I trust, the only judicious reader.”
Neque enim soli iudicant qui maligne legunt.

Letter 38.
Letters, Book IX

“For my part, I regard every death as cruel and premature, that removes one who is preparing some immortal work.”
Mihi autem videtur acerba semper et immatura mors eorum, qui immortale aliquid parant.

Letter 5, 4.
Letters, Book V

“Informations without the accuser's name subscribed must not be admitted in evidence against anyone, as it is introducing a very dangerous precedent, and by no means agreeable to the spirit of the age.”
Sine auctore vero propositi libelli nullo crimine locum habere debent. Nam et pessimi exempli nec nostri saeculi est.

Letter 97, 2; Trajan to Puny.
Letters, Book X

“Such is the disposition of mankind, if they cannot blast an action, they will censure the parade of it; and whether you do what does not deserve to be taken notice of, or take notice yourself of what does, either way you incur reproach.”
Homines enim cum rem destruere non possunt, iactationem eius incessunt. Ita si silenda feceris, factum ipsum, si laudanda non sileas, ipse culparis.

Letter 8, 15.
Letters, Book I

“Generosity, when once she is set forward, knows not how to stop her progress; as her beauty is of that order which grows the more engaging upon nearer acquaintance.”
Nescit enim semel incitata liberalitas stare, cuius pulchritudinem usus ipse commendat.

Letter 11, 3.
Letters, Book V

“Let us strive then, while Life is ours, to secure that Death may find we have left little or nothing he can destroy.”
Proinde, dum suppetit vita, enitamur ut mors quam paucissima quae abolere possit inveniat.

Letter 5, 8.
Letters, Book V

“It is long since I have known the sweets of leisure and repose; since I have known in fine, that indolent but agreeable condition of doing nothing, and being nothing.”
Olim nescio quid sit otium quid quies, quid denique illud iners quidem, iucundum tamen nihil agere nihil esse.

Letter 9, 1.
Letters, Book VIII

“It is allowed to poets to lie.”
Poetis mentiri licet.

Letter 21.
Letters, Book VI

“More cruel than death itself, to die at that particular conjuncture!”
O morte ipsa mortis tempus indignius!

Letter 16, 6.
Letters, Book V

“Everything was done.”

Letter 27.
Letters, Book VII

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