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  1. #1

    Default Help Needed

    Hi there, i'm needing a bit of help finding out where these quotes come from:

    "today is a good day (but a better one to live)"

    "Roma Invicta"

    "It is a sweet and honourable thing to die for one's country"

    "we shall fight the battle in the shade" (battle of the 300 with Leonidas)

    Thanks a lot.

  2. #2
    Member Member zooeyglass's Avatar
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    Default Re: Help Needed

    Quote Originally Posted by Tom0
    "It is a sweet and honourable thing to die for one's country"
    dulce et decorum est pro patria mori

    horace. odes. III.2

    maybe not III.2. but i think so.

    oh, and of course, quoted in wilfred owen.
    inde consilivm mihi pavca de Avgvsto et extrema tradere, mox Tiberii principatum et cetera, sine ira et stvdio, qvorvm cavsas procvl habeo.

  3. #3

    Default Re: Help Needed

    Was Horace Roman or greek? thanks zoo

  4. #4
    Member Member anubis88's Avatar
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    Default Re: Help Needed

    Dude, just type this quotes into google and find out for yourself.
    It's not too hard of a feat
    Europa Barbarorum Secretary

  5. #5

    Default Re: Help Needed

    I am. Although I keep falling short with the "today is a good day to die" especially. I just find lots of die hard christian sites quote it a lot but do not say where it is from.

    Roma Invicta = Undefeated Rome (inscribed on the Statue of Rome. It was an inspirational motto used until the Fall of Rome in 476AD)

  6. #6

    Default Re: Help Needed

    Was it someone called Eugines who said the imortal line: "So much the better: we shall fight in the shade"?

  7. #7
    Member Member zooeyglass's Avatar
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    Default Re: Help Needed

    Quote Originally Posted by Tom0
    "today is a good day (but a better one to live)"

    "Roma Invicta"

    "we shall fight the battle in the shade" (battle of the 300 with Leonidas)
    the 300 stuff i would guess is mainly in Herodotus - he was prone to have a few pithy sayings here and there, so no doubt he's smacked that in someone....hence Frank Miller (who credits Herodotus) putting it in his film.

    Horace was a Roman. Perhaps the best Roman golden age poet...unless people want to argue it was vergil or ovid.....
    inde consilivm mihi pavca de Avgvsto et extrema tradere, mox Tiberii principatum et cetera, sine ira et stvdio, qvorvm cavsas procvl habeo.

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