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#avarice — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #avarice, aggregated by home.social.

  1. A quotation from Horace

    There was a stag, once, who could always defeat a stallion
    And drive him out of their pasture — until, tired of losing,
    The horse begged help of man, and got a bridle in return.
    He beat the stag, all right, and he laughed — but then the rider
    Stayed on his back, and the bit stayed in his mouth.
    Give up your freedom, more worried about poverty than something
    Greater than any sum of gold, and become a slave and stay
    A slave forever, unable to live on only enough.
     
    [Cervus equum pugna melior communibus herbis
    pellebat, donec minor in certamine longo
    imploravit opes hominis frenumque recepit;
    sed postquam victor violins discessit ab hoste,
    non equitem dorso, non frenum depulit ore.
    Sic qui pauperiem veritus potiore metallis
    libertate caret, dominum vehet improbus atque
    serviet aeternum, quia parvo nesciet uti.]

    Horace (65–8 BC) Roman poet, satirist, soldier, politician [Quintus Horatius Flaccus]
    Epistles [Epistularum, Letters], Book 1, ep. 10 “To Aristius Fuscus,” l. 34ff (1.10.34-41) (20 BC) [tr. Raffel (1983)]

    More about (and translations of) this quote: wist.info/horace/80424/

    #quote #quotes #quotation #qotd #horace #avarice #bit #bridle #control #economy #enough #fear #financialsecurity #freedom #frugality #greed #impoverishment #insecurity #liberty #master #poverty #selfsufficiency #servility #sufficiency #worry

  2. A quotation from Horace

    There was a stag, once, who could always defeat a stallion
    And drive him out of their pasture — until, tired of losing,
    The horse begged help of man, and got a bridle in return.
    He beat the stag, all right, and he laughed — but then the rider
    Stayed on his back, and the bit stayed in his mouth.
    Give up your freedom, more worried about poverty than something
    Greater than any sum of gold, and become a slave and stay
    A slave forever, unable to live on only enough.
     
    [Cervus equum pugna melior communibus herbis
    pellebat, donec minor in certamine longo
    imploravit opes hominis frenumque recepit;
    sed postquam victor violins discessit ab hoste,
    non equitem dorso, non frenum depulit ore.
    Sic qui pauperiem veritus potiore metallis
    libertate caret, dominum vehet improbus atque
    serviet aeternum, quia parvo nesciet uti.]

    Horace (65–8 BC) Roman poet, satirist, soldier, politician [Quintus Horatius Flaccus]
    Epistles [Epistularum, Letters], Book 1, ep. 10 “To Aristius Fuscus,” l. 34ff (1.10.34-41) (20 BC) [tr. Raffel (1983)]

    More about (and translations of) this quote: wist.info/horace/80424/

    #quote #quotes #quotation #qotd #horace #avarice #bit #bridle #control #economy #enough #fear #financialsecurity #freedom #frugality #greed #impoverishment #insecurity #liberty #master #poverty #selfsufficiency #servility #sufficiency #worry

  3. A quotation from Horace

    There was a stag, once, who could always defeat a stallion
    And drive him out of their pasture — until, tired of losing,
    The horse begged help of man, and got a bridle in return.
    He beat the stag, all right, and he laughed — but then the rider
    Stayed on his back, and the bit stayed in his mouth.
    Give up your freedom, more worried about poverty than something
    Greater than any sum of gold, and become a slave and stay
    A slave forever, unable to live on only enough.
     
    [Cervus equum pugna melior communibus herbis
    pellebat, donec minor in certamine longo
    imploravit opes hominis frenumque recepit;
    sed postquam victor violins discessit ab hoste,
    non equitem dorso, non frenum depulit ore.
    Sic qui pauperiem veritus potiore metallis
    libertate caret, dominum vehet improbus atque
    serviet aeternum, quia parvo nesciet uti.]

    Horace (65–8 BC) Roman poet, satirist, soldier, politician [Quintus Horatius Flaccus]
    Epistles [Epistularum, Letters], Book 1, ep. 10 “To Aristius Fuscus,” l. 34ff (1.10.34-41) (20 BC) [tr. Raffel (1983)]

    More about (and translations of) this quote: wist.info/horace/80424/

    #quote #quotes #quotation #qotd #horace #avarice #bit #bridle #control #economy #enough #fear #financialsecurity #freedom #frugality #greed #impoverishment #insecurity #liberty #master #poverty #selfsufficiency #servility #sufficiency #worry

  4. A quotation from Horace

    There was a stag, once, who could always defeat a stallion
    And drive him out of their pasture — until, tired of losing,
    The horse begged help of man, and got a bridle in return.
    He beat the stag, all right, and he laughed — but then the rider
    Stayed on his back, and the bit stayed in his mouth.
    Give up your freedom, more worried about poverty than something
    Greater than any sum of gold, and become a slave and stay
    A slave forever, unable to live on only enough.
     
    [Cervus equum pugna melior communibus herbis
    pellebat, donec minor in certamine longo
    imploravit opes hominis frenumque recepit;
    sed postquam victor violins discessit ab hoste,
    non equitem dorso, non frenum depulit ore.
    Sic qui pauperiem veritus potiore metallis
    libertate caret, dominum vehet improbus atque
    serviet aeternum, quia parvo nesciet uti.]

    Horace (65–8 BC) Roman poet, satirist, soldier, politician [Quintus Horatius Flaccus]
    Epistles [Epistularum, Letters], Book 1, ep. 10 “To Aristius Fuscus,” l. 34ff (1.10.34-41) (20 BC) [tr. Raffel (1983)]

    More about (and translations of) this quote: wist.info/horace/80424/

    #quote #quotes #quotation #qotd #horace #avarice #bit #bridle #control #economy #enough #fear #financialsecurity #freedom #frugality #greed #impoverishment #insecurity #liberty #master #poverty #selfsufficiency #servility #sufficiency #worry

  5. A quotation from Horace

    There was a stag, once, who could always defeat a stallion
    And drive him out of their pasture — until, tired of losing,
    The horse begged help of man, and got a bridle in return.
    He beat the stag, all right, and he laughed — but then the rider
    Stayed on his back, and the bit stayed in his mouth.
    Give up your freedom, more worried about poverty than something
    Greater than any sum of gold, and become a slave and stay
    A slave forever, unable to live on only enough.
     
    [Cervus equum pugna melior communibus herbis
    pellebat, donec minor in certamine longo
    imploravit opes hominis frenumque recepit;
    sed postquam victor violins discessit ab hoste,
    non equitem dorso, non frenum depulit ore.
    Sic qui pauperiem veritus potiore metallis
    libertate caret, dominum vehet improbus atque
    serviet aeternum, quia parvo nesciet uti.]

    Horace (65–8 BC) Roman poet, satirist, soldier, politician [Quintus Horatius Flaccus]
    Epistles [Epistularum, Letters], Book 1, ep. 10 “To Aristius Fuscus,” l. 34ff (1.10.34-41) (20 BC) [tr. Raffel (1983)]

    More about (and translations of) this quote: wist.info/horace/80424/

    #quote #quotes #quotation #qotd #horace #avarice #bit #bridle #control #economy #enough #fear #financialsecurity #freedom #frugality #greed #impoverishment #insecurity #liberty #master #poverty #selfsufficiency #servility #sufficiency #worry

  6. A quotation from Samuel Johnson

    That every man would be rich if a wish could obtain riches, is a position which I believe few will contest, at least in a nation like ours, in which commerce has kindled a universal emulation of wealth, and in which money receives all the honours which are the proper right of knowledge and of virtue.

    Samuel Johnson (1709-1784) English writer, lexicographer, critic
    Essay (1759-09-08), The Idler, No. 73

    More about this quote: wist.info/johnson-samuel/83923…

    #quote #quotes #quotation #qotd #samueljohnson #avarice #greed #honors #knowledge #mercantilism #riches #virtue #wealth #wealthiness

  7. A quotation from Samuel Johnson

    That every man would be rich if a wish could obtain riches, is a position which I believe few will contest, at least in a nation like ours, in which commerce has kindled a universal emulation of wealth, and in which money receives all the honours which are the proper right of knowledge and of virtue.

    Samuel Johnson (1709-1784) English writer, lexicographer, critic
    Essay (1759-09-08), The Idler, No. 73

    More about this quote: wist.info/johnson-samuel/83923…

    #quote #quotes #quotation #qotd #samueljohnson #avarice #greed #honors #knowledge #mercantilism #riches #virtue #wealth #wealthiness

  8. Nequient – Avarice Review By Samguineous Maximus

    With a name like that and an album cover featuring a vivisected human head, you’d be forgiven for thinking that Nequient play a form of knuckle-dragging brutal death. Instead, the Chicago four-piece specializes in a brand of chaotic, grinding metallic hardcore that recalls the frenetic math explosion of the early 2000s. Avarice is the band’s third full-length and promises a “unique synthesis of extreme metal and hardcore” to “blast listeners out of complacency with withering screeds against the malignant forces ravaging our world.” Despite some solid releases from last year, it’s been a while since new mathcore shook me to the bone and reminded me of modern existence’s inherent fragility. Nequient have the requisite political bile coursing through their veins—the same volatile fuel that powers the genre’s most unhinged eruptions—but is Avarice actually worth your time, or just another flailing heap of panic chords destined to suffocate beneath a pile of white-belt-era clichés?

    On Avarice, Nequient paints an anarchic arras with a dizzying amount of stylistic touchstones. The band combines the unhinged frivolity of The Sawtooth Grin with the fast-paced stop/start violence of The HIRS Collective, and loads their tracks with riffs that actually stick, echoing early Converge at their most surgical. The twist? These songs feel coherent. Longer runtimes turn what could be scattershot spasms into fully realized compositions, bolstered by a wide palette of metallic textures. Blackened tremolos (“Christofascist Zombie Brigade”), demented odd-meter thrash gallops (“Brain Worms”), and sludged-out funeral dirges (“Splenetic And Moribund”) are all threaded together with mathy convulsions Nequient execute with unnerving precision. Throughout the record, the band moves between ideas at a dizzying pace, consistently impressing with bewildering moments of aural chaos.

    More than just a collection of moments, the songs on Avarice are propelled by relentless pacing and tangible chemistry among the band members. Nequient’s secret sauce lies in the interplay between Patrick Conahan’s disorienting guitar cascades and drummer Chris Avgerin’s dextrous, fill-heavy style. Conahan glides between mosh-ready grind parts (“Mad King / Fool”), undulating, deathy descents (“Rintrah Roars”), and unsettling noise-rock lurches (“Siege Mentality”). Avergin follows along expertly, always mirroring the spastic guitarwork with tasty, intuitive drum parts that guide the ear and ground the anarchy. Aaron Roeming provides the low-end thunder and adds a purposeful heft that thickens the chunkier riffcraft while vocalist Jason Kolkey leads the charge, alternating between a sassy, vitriolic spew and full-bodied death growls while delivering caustic epithets about the horrors of modern life. Kolkey’s acerbic lyrics pull the whole disgusting package together, melding poetic death metal abstraction with punk’s immediacy and sharpening the record’s nihilistic aura into a potent weapon aimed at a broken system.

    In fact, Nequient is almost too adept at channeling the noxious undercurrent of societal id, leaving precious little room to breathe across Avarice’s full-frontal assault. Longer tracks usually ease up on the throttle and inject variety with less frantic, slower sections, like with a menacing sludge-into-breakdown (“Rintrah Roars”), or a hazy, chordal comedown (“Stochastic Terror”). Still, I find myself wanting just a touch more space to find my bearings during full-album listens. Avarice is well-paced, and there are more than enough ideas to keep the 40-minute runtime interesting, but it’s missing one or two blissed-out melodic ideas1 or jaw-dropping displays of contrast to elevate it to the peak of the mathcore mountain. This doesn’t prevent Avarice from being a stunning display of technical aggression, but it does mean more than a few spins to decipher its labyrinthine heaviness.

    Nequient really impressed me with this one. Avarice is a nerve-flayed, teeth-grinding listen that captures the low-grade panic and spiritual exhaustion of modern life with alarming precision. Rather than settling for dime-a-dozen mathcore spasms or rote metallic bludgeoning, the Chicago crew stitches together dissonance, groove, chaos, and razor-wire technicality into something far more purposeful. It’s punishing without being empty, intricate without disappearing up its own ass, and memorable enough to demand repeat spins. If you’re craving chaotic metallic extremity that does more than regurgitate the usual suspects, Nequient have your number.

    Rating: 3.5/5.0
    DR: 5 | Format Reviewed: 320 kbps mp3
    Label: Nefarious Industries
    Websites: nequient.bandcamp.com | facebook.com/nequient.band
    Releases Worldwide: April 24th, 2026

    #2026 #35 #AmericanMetal #Apr26 #Avarice #Botch #Converge #DeathMetal #Grindcore #Hardcore #Mathcore #NefariousIndustries #Nequient #Review #Reviews #SludgeMetal #TheHIRSCollective #TheSawtoothGrin #ThrashMetal
  9. Nequient – Avarice Review By Samguineous Maximus

    With a name like that and an album cover featuring a vivisected human head, you’d be forgiven for thinking that Nequient play a form of knuckle-dragging brutal death. Instead, the Chicago four-piece specializes in a brand of chaotic, grinding metallic hardcore that recalls the frenetic math explosion of the early 2000s. Avarice is the band’s third full-length and promises a “unique synthesis of extreme metal and hardcore” to “blast listeners out of complacency with withering screeds against the malignant forces ravaging our world.” Despite some solid releases from last year, it’s been a while since new mathcore shook me to the bone and reminded me of modern existence’s inherent fragility. Nequient have the requisite political bile coursing through their veins—the same volatile fuel that powers the genre’s most unhinged eruptions—but is Avarice actually worth your time, or just another flailing heap of panic chords destined to suffocate beneath a pile of white-belt-era clichés?

    On Avarice, Nequient paints an anarchic arras with a dizzying amount of stylistic touchstones. The band combines the unhinged frivolity of The Sawtooth Grin with the fast-paced stop/start violence of The HIRS Collective, and loads their tracks with riffs that actually stick, echoing early Converge at their most surgical. The twist? These songs feel coherent. Longer runtimes turn what could be scattershot spasms into fully realized compositions, bolstered by a wide palette of metallic textures. Blackened tremolos (“Christofascist Zombie Brigade”), demented odd-meter thrash gallops (“Brain Worms”), and sludged-out funeral dirges (“Splenetic And Moribund”) are all threaded together with mathy convulsions Nequient execute with unnerving precision. Throughout the record, the band moves between ideas at a dizzying pace, consistently impressing with bewildering moments of aural chaos.

    More than just a collection of moments, the songs on Avarice are propelled by relentless pacing and tangible chemistry among the band members. Nequient’s secret sauce lies in the interplay between Patrick Conahan’s disorienting guitar cascades and drummer Chris Avgerin’s dextrous, fill-heavy style. Conahan glides between mosh-ready grind parts (“Mad King / Fool”), undulating, deathy descents (“Rintrah Roars”), and unsettling noise-rock lurches (“Siege Mentality”). Avergin follows along expertly, always mirroring the spastic guitarwork with tasty, intuitive drum parts that guide the ear and ground the anarchy. Aaron Roeming provides the low-end thunder and adds a purposeful heft that thickens the chunkier riffcraft while vocalist Jason Kolkey leads the charge, alternating between a sassy, vitriolic spew and full-bodied death growls while delivering caustic epithets about the horrors of modern life. Kolkey’s acerbic lyrics pull the whole disgusting package together, melding poetic death metal abstraction with punk’s immediacy and sharpening the record’s nihilistic aura into a potent weapon aimed at a broken system.

    In fact, Nequient is almost too adept at channeling the noxious undercurrent of societal id, leaving precious little room to breathe across Avarice’s full-frontal assault. Longer tracks usually ease up on the throttle and inject variety with less frantic, slower sections, like with a menacing sludge-into-breakdown (“Rintrah Roars”), or a hazy, chordal comedown (“Stochastic Terror”). Still, I find myself wanting just a touch more space to find my bearings during full-album listens. Avarice is well-paced, and there are more than enough ideas to keep the 40-minute runtime interesting, but it’s missing one or two blissed-out melodic ideas1 or jaw-dropping displays of contrast to elevate it to the peak of the mathcore mountain. This doesn’t prevent Avarice from being a stunning display of technical aggression, but it does mean more than a few spins to decipher its labyrinthine heaviness.

    Nequient really impressed me with this one. Avarice is a nerve-flayed, teeth-grinding listen that captures the low-grade panic and spiritual exhaustion of modern life with alarming precision. Rather than settling for dime-a-dozen mathcore spasms or rote metallic bludgeoning, the Chicago crew stitches together dissonance, groove, chaos, and razor-wire technicality into something far more purposeful. It’s punishing without being empty, intricate without disappearing up its own ass, and memorable enough to demand repeat spins. If you’re craving chaotic metallic extremity that does more than regurgitate the usual suspects, Nequient have your number.

    Rating: 3.5/5.0
    DR: 5 | Format Reviewed: 320 kbps mp3
    Label: Nefarious Industries
    Websites: nequient.bandcamp.com | facebook.com/nequient.band
    Releases Worldwide: April 24th, 2026

    #2026 #35 #AmericanMetal #Apr26 #Avarice #Botch #Converge #DeathMetal #Grindcore #Hardcore #Mathcore #NefariousIndustries #Nequient #Review #Reviews #SludgeMetal #TheHIRSCollective #TheSawtoothGrin #ThrashMetal
  10. A quotation from Franklin Roosevelt

    We understand the philosophy of those who offer resistance, of those who conduct a counter offensive against the American people’s march of social progress. It is not an opposition which comes necessarily from wickedness — it is an opposition that comes from subconscious resistance to any measure that disturbs the position of privilege.
       It is an unfortunate human failing that a full pocketbook often groans more loudly than an empty stomach.

    Franklin Delano Roosevelt (1882–1945) American lawyer, politician, statesman, US President (1933–1945)
    Speech (1940-11-01), Campaign Address, Brooklyn Academy of Music, New York

    More about this quote: wist.info/roosevelt-franklin-d…

    #quote #quotes #quotation #qotd #franklinroosevelt #franklindroosevelt #franklindelanoroosevelt #fdr #newdeal #avarice #change #conservatives #elite #greed #privilege #progress #socialjustice #socialwelfare #statusquo

  11. A quotation from Franklin Roosevelt

    We understand the philosophy of those who offer resistance, of those who conduct a counter offensive against the American people’s march of social progress. It is not an opposition which comes necessarily from wickedness — it is an opposition that comes from subconscious resistance to any measure that disturbs the position of privilege.
       It is an unfortunate human failing that a full pocketbook often groans more loudly than an empty stomach.

    Franklin Delano Roosevelt (1882–1945) American lawyer, politician, statesman, US President (1933–1945)
    Speech (1940-11-01), Campaign Address, Brooklyn Academy of Music, New York

    More about this quote: wist.info/roosevelt-franklin-d…

    #quote #quotes #quotation #qotd #franklinroosevelt #franklindroosevelt #franklindelanoroosevelt #fdr #newdeal #avarice #change #conservatives #elite #greed #privilege #progress #socialjustice #socialwelfare #statusquo

  12. A quotation from Horace

    Fortune nor home not more the man can cheer,
    Who lives a prey to covetise or fear,
    Than may a picture’s richest hues delight
    Eyes that with dropping rheum are thick of sight,
    Or warm soft lotions soothe a gout-racked foot,
    Or aching ears be charmed by twangling lute.
    On minds unquiet joy has lost its power;
    In a foul vessel everything turns sour.
     
    [Qui cupit aut metuit, iuvat ilium sic domus et res,
    Ut lippum pictae tabulae, fomenta podagrum,
    Auriculas citbarae collecta sorde dolentes.
    Sincerumst nisi vas, quodcumque infundis acescit
    Sperne voluptate.]

    Horace (65–8 BC) Roman poet, satirist, soldier, politician [Quintus Horatius Flaccus]
    Epistles [Epistularum, Letters], Book 1, ep. 2 “To Lollius,” l. 51ff (1.2.51-54) (14 BC) [tr. Martin (1881)]

    More about (and translations of) this quote: wist.info/horace/82248/

    #quote #quotes #quotation #qotd #horace #avarice #dissatisfaction #dysphoria #enjoyment #fear #greed #joylessness #loss #money #perspective #pleasure #property #unease #unhappiness #wealth

  13. A quotation from Horace

    Fortune nor home not more the man can cheer,
    Who lives a prey to covetise or fear,
    Than may a picture’s richest hues delight
    Eyes that with dropping rheum are thick of sight,
    Or warm soft lotions soothe a gout-racked foot,
    Or aching ears be charmed by twangling lute.
    On minds unquiet joy has lost its power;
    In a foul vessel everything turns sour.
     
    [Qui cupit aut metuit, iuvat ilium sic domus et res,
    Ut lippum pictae tabulae, fomenta podagrum,
    Auriculas citbarae collecta sorde dolentes.
    Sincerumst nisi vas, quodcumque infundis acescit
    Sperne voluptate.]

    Horace (65–8 BC) Roman poet, satirist, soldier, politician [Quintus Horatius Flaccus]
    Epistles [Epistularum, Letters], Book 1, ep. 2 “To Lollius,” l. 51ff (1.2.51-54) (14 BC) [tr. Martin (1881)]

    More about (and translations of) this quote: wist.info/horace/82248/

    #quote #quotes #quotation #qotd #horace #avarice #dissatisfaction #dysphoria #enjoyment #fear #greed #joylessness #loss #money #perspective #pleasure #property #unease #unhappiness #wealth

  14. A quotation from Horace

    Let the man who has acquired Enough not ask for MORE.
    A house and acreage, a pile of bronze and gold coins,
    Have never been able to lower the sick man’s fever
    Or drive out his worries. The proprietor must be well
    If he plans to enjoy the good things he’s gathered together.
     
    [Quod satis est cui contingit, nihil amplius optet.
    Non domus et fundus, non aeris acervus et auri
    Aegroto doniini deduxit corpore febres,
    on animo curas; valeat possessor oportet,
    Si conpertatis rebus bene cogitat uti.]

    Horace (65–8 BC) Roman poet, satirist, soldier, politician [Quintus Horatius Flaccus]
    Epistles [Epistularum, Letters], Book 1, ep. 2 “To Lollius,” l. 46ff (1.2.46-50) (14 BC) [tr. Palmer Bovie (1959)]

    More about (and translations of) this quote: wist.info/horace/82038/

    #quote #quotes #quotation #qotd #Horace #avarice #cure #enough #greed #illness #mentalillness #money #more #property #riches #satisfaction #sufficiency #wealth

  15. A quotation from Horace

    Let the man who has acquired Enough not ask for MORE.
    A house and acreage, a pile of bronze and gold coins,
    Have never been able to lower the sick man’s fever
    Or drive out his worries. The proprietor must be well
    If he plans to enjoy the good things he’s gathered together.
     
    [Quod satis est cui contingit, nihil amplius optet.
    Non domus et fundus, non aeris acervus et auri
    Aegroto doniini deduxit corpore febres,
    on animo curas; valeat possessor oportet,
    Si conpertatis rebus bene cogitat uti.]

    Horace (65–8 BC) Roman poet, satirist, soldier, politician [Quintus Horatius Flaccus]
    Epistles [Epistularum, Letters], Book 1, ep. 2 “To Lollius,” l. 46ff (1.2.46-50) (14 BC) [tr. Palmer Bovie (1959)]

    More about (and translations of) this quote: wist.info/horace/82038/

    #quote #quotes #quotation #qotd #Horace #avarice #cure #enough #greed #illness #mentalillness #money #more #property #riches #satisfaction #sufficiency #wealth

  16. A quotation from C. C. Colton

    A prodigal starts with ten thousand pounds, and dies worth nothing; a miser starts with nothing, and does worth ten thousand pounds. It has been asked which has had the best of it? I should presume the prodigal; he has spent a fortune — but the miser has only left one; — he has lived rich, to die poor; the miser has lived poor, to die rich; and if the prodigal quits life in debt to others, the miser quits it, still deeper in debt to himself.

    Charles Caleb "C. C." Colton (1780-1832) English cleric, writer, aphorist
    Lacon: Or, Many Things in Few Words, Vol. 2, § 131 (1822)

    More about this quote: wist.info/colton-charles-caleb…

    #quote #quotes #quotation #qotd #cccolton #enjoyment #avarice #debt #extravagant #greed #miser #misery #overindulgence #overspending #poverty #prodigal #profligate #selfdeprivation #skinflint #spendthrift #wastefulness #wastrel #wealth

  17. A quotation from C. C. Colton

    A prodigal starts with ten thousand pounds, and dies worth nothing; a miser starts with nothing, and does worth ten thousand pounds. It has been asked which has had the best of it? I should presume the prodigal; he has spent a fortune — but the miser has only left one; — he has lived rich, to die poor; the miser has lived poor, to die rich; and if the prodigal quits life in debt to others, the miser quits it, still deeper in debt to himself.

    Charles Caleb "C. C." Colton (1780-1832) English cleric, writer, aphorist
    Lacon: Or, Many Things in Few Words, Vol. 2, § 131 (1822)

    More about this quote: wist.info/colton-charles-caleb…

    #quote #quotes #quotation #qotd #cccolton #enjoyment #avarice #debt #extravagant #greed #miser #misery #overindulgence #overspending #poverty #prodigal #profligate #selfdeprivation #skinflint #spendthrift #wastefulness #wastrel #wealth

  18. A quotation from C. C. Colton

    A prodigal starts with ten thousand pounds, and dies worth nothing; a miser starts with nothing, and does worth ten thousand pounds. It has been asked which has had the best of it? I should presume the prodigal; he has spent a fortune — but the miser has only left one; — he has lived rich, to die poor; the miser has lived poor, to die rich; and if the prodigal quits life in debt to others, the miser quits it, still deeper in debt to himself.

    Charles Caleb "C. C." Colton (1780-1832) English cleric, writer, aphorist
    Lacon: Or, Many Things in Few Words, Vol. 2, § 131 (1822)

    More about this quote: wist.info/colton-charles-caleb…

    #quote #quotes #quotation #qotd #cccolton #enjoyment #avarice #debt #extravagant #greed #miser #misery #overindulgence #overspending #poverty #prodigal #profligate #selfdeprivation #skinflint #spendthrift #wastefulness #wastrel #wealth

  19. A quotation from C. C. Colton

    A prodigal starts with ten thousand pounds, and dies worth nothing; a miser starts with nothing, and does worth ten thousand pounds. It has been asked which has had the best of it? I should presume the prodigal; he has spent a fortune — but the miser has only left one; — he has lived rich, to die poor; the miser has lived poor, to die rich; and if the prodigal quits life in debt to others, the miser quits it, still deeper in debt to himself.

    Charles Caleb "C. C." Colton (1780-1832) English cleric, writer, aphorist
    Lacon: Or, Many Things in Few Words, Vol. 2, § 131 (1822)

    More about this quote: wist.info/colton-charles-caleb…

    #quote #quotes #quotation #qotd #cccolton #enjoyment #avarice #debt #extravagant #greed #miser #misery #overindulgence #overspending #poverty #prodigal #profligate #selfdeprivation #skinflint #spendthrift #wastefulness #wastrel #wealth

  20. A quotation from Horace

    Gold will be slave or master: ’tis more fit
    That it be led by us than we by it.
     
    [Imperat aut servit collecta pecunia cuique,
    tortum digna sequi potius quam ducere funem.]

    Horace (65-8 BC) Roman poet, satirist, soldier, politician [Quintus Horatius Flaccus]
    Epistles [Epistularum, Letters], Book 1, ep. 10 “To Aristius Fuscus,” l. 47ff (1.10.47-48) (20 BC) [tr. Conington (1874)]

    More info about (and translations of) this quote: wist.info/horace/80885/

    #quote #quotes #quotation #qotd #horace #avarice #estate #greed #money #riches #selfcontrol #selfdiscipline #wealth

  21. A quotation from Horace

    Gold will be slave or master: ’tis more fit
    That it be led by us than we by it.
     
    [Imperat aut servit collecta pecunia cuique,
    tortum digna sequi potius quam ducere funem.]

    Horace (65-8 BC) Roman poet, satirist, soldier, politician [Quintus Horatius Flaccus]
    Epistles [Epistularum, Letters], Book 1, ep. 10 “To Aristius Fuscus,” l. 47ff (1.10.47-48) (20 BC) [tr. Conington (1874)]

    More info about (and translations of) this quote: wist.info/horace/80885/

    #quote #quotes #quotation #qotd #horace #avarice #estate #greed #money #riches #selfcontrol #selfdiscipline #wealth

  22. A quotation from Horace

    There was a stag, once, who could always defeat a stallion
    And drive him out of their pasture — until, tired of losing,
    The horse begged help of man, and got a bridle in return.
    He beat the stag, all right, and he laughed — but then the rider
    Stayed on his back, and the bit stayed in his mouth.
    Give up your freedom, more worried about poverty than something
    Greater than any sum of gold, and become a slave and stay
    A slave forever, unable to live on only enough.
     
    [Cervus equum pugna melior communibus herbis
    pellebat, donec minor in certamine longo
    imploravit opes hominis frenumque recepit;
    sed postquam victor violins discessit ab hoste,
    non equitem dorso, non frenum depulit ore.
    Sic qui pauperiem veritus potiore metallis
    libertate caret, dominum vehet improbus atque
    serviet aeternum, quia parvo nesciet uti.]

    Horace (65-8 BC) Roman poet, satirist, soldier, politician [Quintus Horatius Flaccus]
    Epistles [Epistularum, Letters], Book 1, ep. 10 “To Aristius Fuscus,” l. 34ff (1.10.34-41) (20 BC) [tr. Raffel (1983)]

    More info about (and translations of) this quote: wist.info/horace/80424/

    #quote #quotes #quotation #qotd #horace #avarice #bit #bridle #control #economy #enough #fear #financial security #freedom #greed #impoverishment #insecurity #liberty #master #poverty #selfsufficiency #servility #sufficiency #worry

  23. A quotation from Horace

    There was a stag, once, who could always defeat a stallion
    And drive him out of their pasture — until, tired of losing,
    The horse begged help of man, and got a bridle in return.
    He beat the stag, all right, and he laughed — but then the rider
    Stayed on his back, and the bit stayed in his mouth.
    Give up your freedom, more worried about poverty than something
    Greater than any sum of gold, and become a slave and stay
    A slave forever, unable to live on only enough.
     
    [Cervus equum pugna melior communibus herbis
    pellebat, donec minor in certamine longo
    imploravit opes hominis frenumque recepit;
    sed postquam victor violins discessit ab hoste,
    non equitem dorso, non frenum depulit ore.
    Sic qui pauperiem veritus potiore metallis
    libertate caret, dominum vehet improbus atque
    serviet aeternum, quia parvo nesciet uti.]

    Horace (65-8 BC) Roman poet, satirist, soldier, politician [Quintus Horatius Flaccus]
    Epistles [Epistularum, Letters], Book 1, ep. 10 “To Aristius Fuscus,” l. 34ff (1.10.34-41) (20 BC) [tr. Raffel (1983)]

    More info about (and translations of) this quote: wist.info/horace/80424/

    #quote #quotes #quotation #qotd #horace #avarice #bit #bridle #control #economy #enough #fear #financial security #freedom #greed #impoverishment #insecurity #liberty #master #poverty #selfsufficiency #servility #sufficiency #worry

  24. A quotation from Horace

    There was a stag, once, who could always defeat a stallion
    And drive him out of their pasture — until, tired of losing,
    The horse begged help of man, and got a bridle in return.
    He beat the stag, all right, and he laughed — but then the rider
    Stayed on his back, and the bit stayed in his mouth.
    Give up your freedom, more worried about poverty than something
    Greater than any sum of gold, and become a slave and stay
    A slave forever, unable to live on only enough.
     
    [Cervus equum pugna melior communibus herbis
    pellebat, donec minor in certamine longo
    imploravit opes hominis frenumque recepit;
    sed postquam victor violins discessit ab hoste,
    non equitem dorso, non frenum depulit ore.
    Sic qui pauperiem veritus potiore metallis
    libertate caret, dominum vehet improbus atque
    serviet aeternum, quia parvo nesciet uti.]

    Horace (65-8 BC) Roman poet, satirist, soldier, politician [Quintus Horatius Flaccus]
    Epistles [Epistularum, Letters], Book 1, ep. 10 “To Aristius Fuscus,” l. 34ff (1.10.34-41) (20 BC) [tr. Raffel (1983)]

    More info about (and translations of) this quote: wist.info/horace/80424/

    #quote #quotes #quotation #qotd #horace #avarice #bit #bridle #control #economy #enough #fear #financial security #freedom #greed #impoverishment #insecurity #liberty #master #poverty #selfsufficiency #servility #sufficiency #worry

  25. A quotation from Horace

    There was a stag, once, who could always defeat a stallion
    And drive him out of their pasture — until, tired of losing,
    The horse begged help of man, and got a bridle in return.
    He beat the stag, all right, and he laughed — but then the rider
    Stayed on his back, and the bit stayed in his mouth.
    Give up your freedom, more worried about poverty than something
    Greater than any sum of gold, and become a slave and stay
    A slave forever, unable to live on only enough.
     
    [Cervus equum pugna melior communibus herbis
    pellebat, donec minor in certamine longo
    imploravit opes hominis frenumque recepit;
    sed postquam victor violins discessit ab hoste,
    non equitem dorso, non frenum depulit ore.
    Sic qui pauperiem veritus potiore metallis
    libertate caret, dominum vehet improbus atque
    serviet aeternum, quia parvo nesciet uti.]

    Horace (65-8 BC) Roman poet, satirist, soldier, politician [Quintus Horatius Flaccus]
    Epistles [Epistularum, Letters], Book 1, ep. 10 “To Aristius Fuscus,” l. 34ff (1.10.34-41) (20 BC) [tr. Raffel (1983)]

    More info about (and translations of) this quote: wist.info/horace/80424/

    #quote #quotes #quotation #qotd #horace #avarice #bit #bridle #control #economy #enough #fear #financial security #freedom #greed #impoverishment #insecurity #liberty #master #poverty #selfsufficiency #servility #sufficiency #worry

  26. A quotation from Kit Marlowe

    FERNEZE: Excesse of wealth is cause of covetousnesse:
       And covetousnesse, oh ’tis a monstrous sinne.

    Christopher "Kit" Marlowe (1564-1593) English dramatist and poet
    The Jew of Malta, Act 1, sc. 2, l. 124ff (c. 1590)

    More info about this quote: wist.info/marlowe-christopher/…

    #quote #quotes #quotation #qotd #kitmarlowe #christophermarlowe #avarice #coveting #covetousness #greed #riches #wealth

  27. A quotation from Ben Franklin

    Money and Man a mutual Friendship show:
    Man makes false Money, Money makes Man so.

    Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790) American statesman, scientist, philosopher, aphorist
    Poor Richard (1742 ed.)

    More info about this quote: wist.info/franklin-benjamin/80…

    #quote #quotes #quotation #qotd #franklin #benfranklin #benjaminfranklin #poorrichard #poorrichardsalmanac #avarice #counterfeiting #deception #dishonor #greed #humannature #money #wealth

  28. A quotation from Samuel Johnson

    Thus it comes to pass, that our desires always increase with our possessions; the knowledge that something remains yet unenjoyed, impairs our enjoyment of the good before us.

    Samuel Johnson (1709-1784) English writer, lexicographer, critic
    Essay (1753-06-26), The Adventurer, No. 67

    More info about this quote: wist.info/johnson-samuel/8509/

    #quote #quotes #quotation #qotd #samueljohnson #enjoyment #pleasure #wealth #avarice #desire #dissatisfaction #envy #greed #materialism #possessions #property

  29. FYI #highsociety Fortunate man is banished from the 'other' #Social (?) Mejah channels mentioned. I post just in case you missed the connection between the world of high tarts, #fashion ? , #fluencers (who dey?) , other #grifters and #greed #avarice #virtue #signalling in it's gross pomposity. Bloody hell Palky, that was a long sentence and no swearing!
    theguardian.com/commentisfree/

  30. FYI #highsociety Fortunate man is banished from the 'other' #Social (?) Mejah channels mentioned. I post just in case you missed the connection between the world of high tarts, #fashion ? , #fluencers (who dey?) , other #grifters and #greed #avarice #virtue #signalling in it's gross pomposity. Bloody hell Palky, that was a long sentence and no swearing!
    theguardian.com/commentisfree/

  31. A quotation from Emerson

    Want is a growing giant whom the coat of Have was never large enough to cover.

    Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882) American essayist, lecturer, poet
    Essay (1860), “Wealth,” The Conduct of Life, ch. 3

    Sourcing, notes: wist.info/emerson-ralph-waldo/…

    #quote #quotes #quotation #avarice #desire #dissatisfaction #envy #greed #lust #possessions #satisfaction #unsatisfied #want #emerson

  32. A quotation from Horace

    Like the Athenian miser, who was wont
    To meet men’s curses with a hero’s front:
    “Folks hiss me,” said he, “but myself I clap
    When I tell o’er my treasures on my lap.”
     
       [Ut quidam memoratur Athenis
    sordidus ac dives, populi contemnere voces
    sic solitus: ‘populus me sibilat, at mihi plaudo
    ipse domi, simul ac nummos contemplor in arca.’]

    Horace (65-8 BC) Roman poet, satirist, soldier, politician [Quintus Horatius Flaccus]
    Satires [Saturae, Sermones], Book 1, # 1, “Qui fit, Maecenas,” l. 64ff (1.1.64-67) (35 BC) [tr. Conington (1874)]

    Sourcing, notes, alternate translations: wist.info/horace/75284/

    #quote #quotes #quotation #avarice #riches #booing #disdain #greed #hissing #miser #mob #money #public #solace #treasure #wealth

  33. A quotation from Horace

    Like the Athenian miser, who was wont
    To meet men’s curses with a hero’s front:
    “Folks hiss me,” said he, “but myself I clap
    When I tell o’er my treasures on my lap.”
     
       [Ut quidam memoratur Athenis
    sordidus ac dives, populi contemnere voces
    sic solitus: ‘populus me sibilat, at mihi plaudo
    ipse domi, simul ac nummos contemplor in arca.’]

    Horace (65-8 BC) Roman poet, satirist, soldier, politician [Quintus Horatius Flaccus]
    Satires [Saturae, Sermones], Book 1, # 1, “Qui fit, Maecenas,” l. 64ff (1.1.64-67) (35 BC) [tr. Conington (1874)]

    Sourcing, notes, alternate translations: wist.info/horace/75284/

    #quote #quotes #quotation #avarice #riches #booing #disdain #greed #hissing #miser #mob #money #public #solace #treasure #wealth

  34. @mynamesnotgordy I’m going to be splurging on Lays chips, family size at $5,99. Used to be $2.99 before #GalenWestonJr decided he needed to increase profits cause times are tough.
    #GalenWestonJr, leader of the food cartel in Canada, is making immoral and amoral profits. A bottle of ASA 81 mg at IDA pharmacy, 180 capsules, is $11.50. At SDM, same ASA 81 mg, 180 capsules, is $20.99 on special. #Greed #Avarice
    #CorporateProfiteering #CanadianMediaFailsMiserably

  35. @mynamesnotgordy I’m going to be splurging on Lays chips, family size at $5,99. Used to be $2.99 before #GalenWestonJr decided he needed to increase profits cause times are tough.
    #GalenWestonJr, leader of the food cartel in Canada, is making immoral and amoral profits. A bottle of ASA 81 mg at IDA pharmacy, 180 capsules, is $11.50. At SDM, same ASA 81 mg, 180 capsules, is $20.99 on special. #Greed #Avarice
    #CorporateProfiteering #CanadianMediaFailsMiserably