"Tum sortem sapiens humanam risit Apollo, invidiaeque malum rettulit ipse Iovi, quae, dum proventis aliorum gaudet iniquis, laetior infelix et sua damna cupit."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
Then Apollo, learning the truth, smiled at human lot, and with his own lips reported to Jupiter the curse of jealousy, which, as it rejoices in other people's untoward fortunes, is unlucky enough the more gladly to desire its own harm also. β XXII. De Cupido et Invido ('The Greedy Man and the Jealous Man')
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Avianus
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Avianus
(or possibly Avienus; fl. c. AD 400) was a Latin writer of fables. He appears to have lived at Rome and to have been a pagan. Forty-two fables by him are known, some of which became connected with epimythia ('morals') of later origin through the mediaeval manuscript tradition.
14 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Avianus β
Related Quotes
"Sic qui cuncta deos uno male tempore poscunt, iustius his etiam vota diurna negant."
"Non quia magna tibi tribuerunt membra parentes viribus effectum constituere tuis."
""Nam quae praeda, rogas, quae spes contingere posset, iurgia nutricis cum mihi verba darent?"Haec sibi dicta putet seβ¦"
"Non sine supremo magna labore peti."
"Sic quicumque nova sublatus laude tumescit, dat merito poenas, dum meliora cupit."
"Metiri se quemque decet propriisque iuvari laudibus, alterius nec bona ferre sibi."
"Postquam nulla viam virtus dedit, admovet omnes indignata nova calliditate dolos."
"Viribus haec docuit quam sit prudentia maior."
"Quisquis torpentem passus transisse iuventam, nec timuit vitae providus ante mala, collectus senio, postquam gravis aβ¦"
"Proderit ergo graves quamvis perferre labores, otia quam tenerum mox peritura pati."