Seneca Quotes
Seneca Quotes. Below is a collection of famous Seneca quotes. Here you can find the most popular and greatest quotes by Seneca. Share these quotations with your friends and family.
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 mom...
By Seneca
Pain, scorned by yonder gout-ridden wretch, endured by yonder dyspeptic in the midst of his dainties, borne bravely by the girl in travail. Sl...
By Seneca
Just as I shall select my ship when I am about to go on a voyage, or my house when I propose to take a residence, so I shall choose my death w...
By Seneca
Without an adversary prowess shrivels. We see how great and efficient it really is only when it shows by endurance what it is capable of.
By Seneca
While the fates permit, live happily life speeds on with hurried step, and with winged days the wheel of the headlong year is turned.
By Seneca
While the fates permit, live happily; life speeds on with hurried step, and with winged days the wheel of the headlong year is turned.
By Seneca
We should conduct ourselves not as if we ought to live for the body, but as if we could not live without it.
By Seneca
We should every night call ourselves to an account; What infirmity have I mastered today? What passions opposed? What temptation resisted? What virtue acquired? Our vices will abort of themselves if they be brought every day to the shrift.
By Seneca
To see a man fearless in dangers. untainted with lusts, happy in adversity, composed in a tumult, and laughing at all those things which are generally either coveted or feared, all men must acknowledge that this can be from nothing else but a beam of divinity that influences a mortal body.
By Seneca
To be always fortunate, and to pass through life with a soul that has never known sorrow, is to be ignorant of one half of nature.
By Seneca
To be feared is to fear no one has been able to strike terror into others and at the same time enjoy peace of mind.
By Seneca
To be feared is to fear: no one has been able to strike terror into others and at the same time enjoy peace of mind.
By Seneca
The spirit in which a thing is given determines that in which the debt is acknowledged it's the intention, not the face-value of the gift, that's weighed.
By Seneca