Propertius quotes:

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  • Make room, Roman writers, make room for Greek writers; something greater than the Iliad is born.

  • By gold all good faith has been banished; by gold our rights are abused; the law itself is influenced by gold, and soon there will be an end of every modest restraint.

  • Among absent lovers, ardor always fares better.

  • Even a faithful mistress can be bent by constant threats.

  • Tell me who is able to keep his bed chaste, or which goddess is able to live with one god alone?

  • Even if my strength should fail, my daring will win me praise: in might enterprises even the will to succeed is enough.

  • You, O money, are the cause of a restless life! Because of you we journey toward a premature death; you provide cruel nourishment for the evils of men; the seed of our cares sprouts from your head.

  • Allow me, whom Fortune always desires to bury, lay down my life in these final trivialities. Many have freely died in longlasting loves, among whose number may the earth cover me as well.

  • Not only the bull attacks his enemies with curved horn, but also the sheep, when harmed fights back.

  • Afflicted by love's madness all are blind.

  • Age makes all things greater after their death; a name comes to the tongue easier from the grave.

  • And nobility will not be able to help you with your love; Love does not know how to cede to ancestral images.

  • Cupid is naked and does not like artifices contrived by beauty.

  • Fame due to the achievements of the mind never perishes.

  • I say as an expert, no one is faithful in love -Expertus dico, nemo est in amore fidelis

  • If she is pleasing to one man, a girl is taken care of.

  • In love, a verse of Mimnermus has more power than one of Homer.

  • I am climbing a difficult road; but the glory gives me strength.

  • No rival will steal away my sure love; that glory will be my gray hair.

  • Faith is not sure, if you cannot turn love to quarrel; may my enemies obtain a mild mistress.

  • A cause breaks or exalts a soldier's strength; unless that cause is just, shame will make him throw his weapons away.

  • Always in absent lovers love's tide flows stronger.

  • Anyone who is an enemy of mine, let him love women, but let he who is my friend rejoice in men.

  • Do not unto another that which you would not he should do unto you.

  • Every man now worships gold, all other reverence being done away.

  • Fickleness has always befriended the beautiful.

  • Great is the height I just scale, but the prospect of glory gives me strength.

  • If you see anything, always deny that you've seen; or if perchance something pains you, deny that you're hurt.

  • In great things it is enough even to have willed.

  • Let each man have the wit to go his own way.

  • Let each man pass his days in that endeavor wherein his gift is greatest.

  • Let no one be willing to speak ill of the absent.

  • Love can be put off, never abandoned.

  • Love is fostered by confidence and constancy; he who is able to give much is able also to love much.

  • Love never offers to anyone wings so easy that he does not hold him back with his other hand.

  • Love presses my head with carefully placed feet, wretch that he is, until he has taught me to detest chaste girls, and to live with no counsel.

  • Never change when love has found its home.

  • Something greater than the Iliad now springs to birth -Nescio quid maius nascitur Iliade

  • That death is best which comes appropriately at a ripe age.

  • The eyes are the pioneers that first announce the soft tale of love.

  • The law itself follows gold.

  • There is no wide road which leads to the Muses.

  • There is something beyond the grave; death does not end all, and the pale ghost escapes from the vanquished pyre.

  • To each man at his birth nature has given some fault.

  • Let's give the historians something to write about

  • Beauty is fading, nor is fortune stable; sooner or later death comes to all.

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