Caput
1 II | herself kindly; life, if you know how to use it, is long.
2 VII | the very end of life to know how to live; yet the greater
3 VII | confessing that they did not yet know—still less do those others
4 VII | still less do those others know. Believe me, it takes a
5 VIII | carefully which will fail you know not when. ~ Yet there is
6 VIII | that these people do not know how precious a thing time
7 VIII | the very thing they do not know is whether they are suffering
8 XI | In a word, do you want to know how they do not "live long"?
9 XII | that this man, who does not know whether he is sitting, knows
10 XII | more if he really did not know, or if he pretended not
11 XII | or if he pretended not to know this. They really are subject
12 XII | lowly and despicable to know what he is doing. After
13 XII | who, in order that he may know the postures of his own
14 XIII | serve any useful purpose to know that Pompey was the first
15 XIII | Is it more profitable to know this than that Mount Aventine,
16 XVI | nothing to do, and they do not know how to dispose of their
17 XVIII| release and retirement. You, I know, manage the accounts of
18 XIX | awaits much that is good to know—the love and practice of
19 XIX | hating. If these wish to know how short their life is,
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