
Top 100 Quotes About Pliny
#1. He would deny this is confronted, citing evasively his affection for Dante and Giotto, but anything overtly religious filled him with a pagan alarm; and I believe that like Pliny, whom he resembled in so many respects, he secretly thought it to be a degenerate cult carried to extravagant lengths.
Donna Tartt
#2. I texted Nightingale to let him know our change in disposition and then I picked up my Pliny, because nothing says stuck all alone in your flat like a Roman know-it-all
Ben Aaronovitch
#3. [Pliny the Elder] used to say that no book was so bad but some good might be got out of it.
Pliny The Younger
#4. Optimumque est, ut volgo dixere, aliena insania frui. And the best plan is, as the popular saying was, to profit by the folly of others. Pliny the Elder, Historia Naturalis
Robert Galbraith
#5. [Footnote:] Pliny the Elder perished in 79 A.D. when he refused to flee from the great eruption of Mt. Vesuvius, insisting that everything would be all right. It wasn't.
Will Cuppy
#6. Europe's history of trading relations with India is borne out in the writings of the ancient historians Herodotus, Pliny, Petronius and Ptolemy, and
Shashi Tharoor
#7. Pliny ... makes the statement, and for untrustworthiness of statement he cannot easily be surpassed.
George Henry Lewes
#8. There exists one book, which, to my taste, furnishes the happiest treatise of natural education. What then is this marvelous book? Is it Aristotle? Is it Pliny, is it Buffon? No-it is Robinson Crusoe.
Jean-Jacques Rousseau
#9. Pliny the Elder, who when Rome was burning requested Nero to play You Picked a Fine Time to Leave Me, Lucille. Never got a dinner!
Red Buttons
#10. In the first century A.D., Pliny estimated that the average Roman citizen consumed only 25 grams of salt a day. The modern American consumes even less if the salt content of packaged food is not included.
Mark Kurlansky
#11. You are a worm who thought himself a serpent just because you slither. But your power was not real, Pliny. It was all a dream. Time now to wake.
Pierce Brown
#12. The mind should be accustomed to make wise reflections, and draw curious conclusions as it goes along; the habitude of which made Pliny the Younger affirm that he never read book so bad but he drew some profit from it.
Laurence Sterne
#13. Pliny is a leech," I say. "A liar as much as you're an honest man."
"And that makes him dangerous. Liars make the best promises.
Pierce Brown
#14. Pliny the Elder explained how the "milk" of the tithymalus plant could be used as an invisible ink. Although the ink is transparent after drying, gentle heating chars it and turns it brown. Many organic fluids behave in a similar way, because they are rich in carbon and therefore char easily.
Simon Singh
#15. Wise men read books about history, Pliny. Strong men write them.
Pierce Brown
#16. We must define flattery and praise; they are distinct. Trajan was encouraged to virtue by the panegyric Pliny; Tiberius became obstinate in vice from the flattery of his senators.
Louis XVI Of France
#17. There is no book so bad it does not contain something good.
Pliny
#18. It is wonderful how the mind is stirred and quickened into activity by brisk bodily exercise.
Pliny The Younger
#20. Nature makes us buy her presents at the price of so many sufferings that it is doubtful whether she deserves most the name of parent or stepmother.
Pliny The Elder
#21. So we must work at our profession and not make anybody else's idleness an excuse for our own. There is no lack of readers and listeners; it is for us to produce something worth being written and heard.
Pliny The Younger
#22. Man alone at the very moment of his birth, cast naked upon the naked earth, does she abandon to cries and lamentations.
Pliny The Elder
#23. In the literary as well as military world, most powerful abilities will often be found concealed under a rustic garb.
Pliny The Elder
#24. It is difficult to retain what you may have learned unless you should practice it. -Difficile est tenere quae acceperis nisi exerceas
Pliny The Younger
#25. In the darkness you could hear the crying of women, the wailing of infants, and the shouting of men. Some prayed for help. Others wished for death. But still more imagined that there were no Gods left, and that the universe was plunged into eternal darkness.
Pliny The Younger
#26. Nullus est liber tam malus ut non aliqua parte prosit - There is no book so bad that it is not profitable on some part.
Pliny The Younger
#27. God has no power over the past except to cover it with oblivion.
Pliny The Elder
#28. I think it is the most beautiful and humane thing in the world, so to mingle gravity with pleasure that the one may not sink into melancholy, nor the other rise up into wantonness.
Pliny The Elder
#30. Nature has given man no better thing than shortness of life.
Pliny The Elder
#31. As for the garden of mint, the very smell of it alone recovers and refreshes our spirits, as the taste stirs up our appetite for meat.
Pliny The Elder
#32. Lust is an enemy to the purse, a foe to the person, a canker to the mind, a corrosive to the conscience, a weakness of the wit, a besotter of the senses, and finally, a mortal bane to all the body.
Pliny The Elder
#33. All men possess in their bodies a poison which acts upon serpents; and the human saliva, it is said, makes them take to flight, as though they had been touched with boiling water. The same substance, it is said, destroys them the moment it enters their throat.
Pliny The Elder
#34. In comparing various authors with one another, I have discovered that some of the gravest and latest writers have transcribed, word for word, from former works, without making acknowledgment.
Pliny The Elder
#35. Always act in such a way as to secure the love of your neighbour.
Pliny The Elder
#37. Indeed, what is there that does not appear marvelous when it comes to our knowledge for the first time? How many things, too, are looked up on as quite impossible until they have been actually effected?
Pliny The Elder
#38. We neglect those things which are under our very eyes, and heedless of things within our grasp, pursue those which are afar off.
Pliny The Elder
#39. Cats too, with what silent stealthiness, with what light steps do they creep up to a bird!
Pliny The Elder
#41. No man's abilities are so remarkably shining as not to stand in need of a proper opportunity.
Pliny The Elder
#42. The great business of man is to improve his mind, and govern his manners; all other projects and pursuits, whether in our power to compass or not, are only amusements.
Pliny The Elder
#44. The best kind of wine is that which is most pleasant to him who drinks it.
Pliny The Elder
#45. It is ridiculous to suppose that the great head of things, whatever it be, pays any regard to human affairs.
Pliny The Elder
#46. Grief has limits, whereas apprehension has none. For we grieve only for what we know has happened, but we fear all that possibly may happen.
Pliny The Elder
#47. They enhance the value of their favors by the words with which they are accompanied.
Pliny The Younger
#48. Sure, football is a silly game. But have you seen what else is on television?
Pliny The Elder
#49. I would have a man generous to his country, his neighbors, his kindred, his friends, and most of all his poor friends. Not like some who are most lavish with those who are able to give most of them.
Pliny The Elder
#50. Such is the audacity of man, that he hath learned to counterfeit Nature, yea, and is so bold as to challenge her in her work.
Pliny The Elder
#51. A god cannot procure death for himself, even if he wished it, which, so numerous are the evils of life, has been granted to man as our chief good.
Pliny The Elder
#52. Many other means there be, that promise the foreknowledge of things to come: besides the raising up and conjuring of ghosts departed, the conference also with familiars and spirits infernal. And all these were found out in our days, to be no better than vanities and false illusions ...
Pliny The Elder
#53. As touching peaches in general, the very name in Latine whereby they are called Persica, doth evidently show that they were brought out of Persia first.
Pliny The Elder
#54. However often you may have done them a favour, if you once refuse they forget everything except your refusal.
Pliny The Younger
#56. To laugh, if but for an instant only, has never been granted to man before the fortieth day from his birth, and then it is looked upon as a miracle of precocity.
Pliny The Elder
#58. Man is the only one that knows nothing, that can learn nothing without being taught. He can neither speak nor walk nor eat, and in short he can do nothing at the prompting of nature only, but weep.
Pliny The Elder
#60. Nature is to be found in her entirety nowhere more than in her smallest creatures.
Pliny The Elder
#61. Among these things, one thing seems certain - that nothing certain exists and that there is nothing more pitiful or more presumptuous than man.
Pliny The Elder
#62. It is generally much more shameful to lose a good reputation than never to have acquired it.
Pliny The Elder
#63. Example is the softest and least invidious way of commanding.
Pliny The Elder
#64. Amid the sufferings of life on earth, suicide is God's best gift to man.
Pliny The Elder
#65. The lust of avarice as so totally seized upon mankind that their wealth seems rather to possess them than they possess their wealth.
Pliny The Elder
#66. There is no book so bad that it is not profitable in some part. -Nullus est liber tam malus ut non aliqua parte prosit
Pliny The Younger
#67. As land is improved by sowing it with various seeds, so is the mind by exercising it with different studies.
Pliny The Elder
#69. Everyone is prejudiced in favor of his own powers of discernment ...
Pliny The Younger
#70. True glory consists in doing what deserves to be written, and writing what deserves to be read.
Pliny The Elder
#71. It is best not to be born or to die as soon as possible.
Pliny The Elder
#73. It is this earth that, like a kind mother, receives us at our birth, and sustains us when born; it is this alone, of all the elements around us, that is never found an enemy of man.
Pliny The Elder
#74. In these matters, the only certainty is that nothing is certain
Pliny The Elder
#75. The desire to know a thing is heightened by its gratification being deferred.
Pliny The Elder
#76. The feasant hens of Colchis, which have two ears as it were consisting of feathers, which they will set up and lay down as they list.
Pliny The Elder
#79. Glory ought to be the consequence, not the motive, of our actions; and although it happen not to attend the worthy deed, yet it is by no means the less fair for having missed the applause it deserved.
Pliny The Younger
#80. A dear bargain is always disagreeable, particularly as it is a reflection upon the buyer's judgment.
Pliny The Elder
#82. It has become quite a common proverb that in wine there is truth (In Vino Veritas).
Pliny The Elder
#83. There is in them a softer fire than the ruby, there is the brilliant purple of the amethyst, and the sea green of the emerald - all shining together in incredible union. Some by their splendor rival the colors of the painters, others the flame of burning sulphur or of fire quickened by oil.
Pliny The Elder
#84. There is alas no law against incompetency; no striking example is made. They learn by our bodily jeopardy and make experiments until the death of the patients, and the doctor is the only person not punished for murder.
Pliny The Elder
#85. Suicide is a privilege of man which deity does not possess.
Pliny The Elder
#86. The erection of a monument is superfluous, our memory will endure if our lives have deserved it.
Pliny The Younger
#88. Shellfish are the prime cause of the decline of morals and the adaptation of an extravagant lifestyle. Indeed of the whole realm of Nature the sea is in many ways the most harmful to the stomach, with its great variety of dishes and tasty fish.
Pliny The Elder
#89. It is better to excel in any single art than to arrive only at mediocrity in several, so moderate skill in several is to be preferred where one cannot attain to perfection in any.
Pliny The Younger
#90. The brain is the highest of the organs in position, and it is protected by the vault of the head; it has no flesh or blood or refuse. It is the citadel of sense-perception.
Pliny The Elder
#92. There is no book so bad that some good can not be got out of it,
Pliny The Elder
#99. Let not things, because they are common, enjoy for that the less share of our consideration.
Pliny The Elder
#100. Cincinnatus was ploughing his four jugera of land upon the Vaticanian Hill, the same that are still known as the Quintian Meadows, when the messenger brought him the dictatorship, finding him, the tradition says, stripped to the work.
Pliny The Elder
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