The fox changes his skin but not his habits.

When I am dead let the earth be dissolved in fire.

Hail, Caesar, those who are about to die salute thee. -

I found Rome built of bricks; I leave her clothed in marble.

Let the die be cast. [Lat., Jacta alea esto; or, jacta esa alea.)

General Quotations about Evenings Let us add this one more night to our lives.

These things by reason of our friendship I have not hesitated glo to communicate.

Few of Caesar's assassins outlived him by more than three years, or died in their beds.

Would that the Roman people had but one neck! [Lat., Utinam populus Romanus unam cervicem haberet!]

A good shepherd shears his flock, not flays them. [Lat., Boni pastoris est tondere pecus non deglubere.]

If you did not know at age five that the gods are made up beings and the myths made up stories, you are a fool.

Punishment [by Nero] was inflicted on the Christians, a class of men given to a new and mischievous superstition.

As the Jews were making constant disturbances at the instigation of Chrestus, he [ Claudius ] expelled them [the Jews] from Rome

He [Caesar Augustus] found a city built of brick; he left it built of marble. [Lat., Urbem lateritiam accepit, mamoream relinquit.]

Again, during a sacrifice, the augur Spurinna warned Caesar that the danger threatening him would not come later than the Ides of March.

Suetonius, in holding up a mirror to those Caesars of diverting legend, reflects not only them but ourselves: half-tamed creatures, whose great moral task is to hold in balance the angel and the monster within - for we are both, and to ignore this duality is to invite disaster.

At a banquet Caligula was suddenly seized with a fit of helpless laughter. The consuls reclining next to him asked if they might share in the imperial merriment. Caligula, wiping the tears from his eyes, managed to gasp, "You'll never guess! It suddenly occurred to me that I had only to give a single nod, and both your throats would be cut on the spot."

Share This Page