Page:The Moral Sayings of Publius Syrus, A Roman Slave.djvu/77

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ies.

840.

The greater our fortune, the more likely to fail us.

841.

Anger stops nothing.

842.

Accused innocence fears fate, not the witnesses.

843.

It is not a hard lot to be obliged to return to the state whence we came.

844.

I should not please to be king, if I must therefore be pleased to be cruel.

845.

The hour of triumph loves no co-partnership.

846.

You can obey a request much better than a command.

847.

Every thing is worth what the purchaser will pay for it.[1]

848.

Give your friend cause to blush; and you will be likely to lose him.

849.

Repeated pardons encourage offenses.

850.

To prefer a request smacks of servility to a noble spirit.

851.

You would not sin so often if you knew some things of which you are ignor

  1. This saying is equivalent to the maxim current in our day: a thing is worth what it will fetch. There can be no millenium {{{1}}} for civilized man till this maxim has ceased to be true, and a thing becomes worth the labor it cost to produce it.