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| author | Charles Cabergs <me@cacharle.xyz> | 2024-11-15 13:18:48 +0100 |
|---|---|---|
| committer | Charles Cabergs <me@cacharle.xyz> | 2024-11-15 13:18:48 +0100 |
| commit | d73f7e2c84bd6dcb107691055acc5bf68b5b733f (patch) | |
| tree | 299cbe17aac82e54ec78b25187c7ecc47cf4b1e8 /local/share | |
| parent | 0efabc71c18d88f957d6fd54d3f23364f16a2535 (diff) | |
| download | dotfiles-d73f7e2c84bd6dcb107691055acc5bf68b5b733f.tar.gz dotfiles-d73f7e2c84bd6dcb107691055acc5bf68b5b733f.tar.bz2 dotfiles-d73f7e2c84bd6dcb107691055acc5bf68b5b733f.zip | |
Add cowsay-total-war-quotes script
Diffstat (limited to 'local/share')
| -rw-r--r-- | local/share/total_war_quotes | 423 |
1 files changed, 423 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/local/share/total_war_quotes b/local/share/total_war_quotes new file mode 100644 index 0000000..c3cb8d3 --- /dev/null +++ b/local/share/total_war_quotes @@ -0,0 +1,423 @@ +An adversary is more hurt by desertion than by slaughter. +- Vegetius + +What can a soldier do who charges when out of breath? +- Vegetius + +Few men are born brave, many become so through training and force of discipline. +- Vegetius + +Valour is superior to numbers. +- Vegetius + +An ambuscade, if discovered and promptly surrounded, will repay the intended mischief with interest +- Vegetius + +A general is not easily overcome who can form a true judgement of his own and the enemy's forces. +- Vegetius + +Qui desiderat pacem praeparet bellum +Let him who desires peace prepare for war +- Vegetius + +We die today not only for our friends and family but for our gods and for our forefathers and men before them so pray to them to make us victorious +- Vegetius + +Let all be present and expect the palm, the prize of victory. +- Virgil + +So ends the bloody business of the day. +- Homer + +Even the bravest cannot fight beyond his strength. +- Homer + +Men grow tired of sleep, love, singing and dancing sooner than war. +- Homer + +He serves me most, who serves his country best. +- Homer + +The blade itself incites to violence +- Homer + +To those that flee comes neither power nor glory +- Homer + +Ye gods, what dastards would our host command? Swept to the war, the lumber of the land. +- Homer + +Noble and manly music invigorates the spirit, strengthens the wavering man, and incites him to great and worthy deeds. +- Homer + +A glorious death is his who for his country falls. +- Homer + +Conquered, we conquer +- Plautus + +Ah, yes, mere infantry +poor beggars... +- Plautus + +The valiant profit more their country than the finest, cleverest speakers +- Plautus + +Quick decisions are unsafe decisions. +- Sophocles + +It is the brave man's part to live with glory, or with glory die. +- Sophocles + +The outcome corresponds less to expectations in war than in any other case whatsoever. +- Livy + +Vae victus. +Woe to the vanquished. +- Livy + +To a good general luck is important. +- Livy + +All warfare is based on deception. +- Sun Tzu + +In war, numbers alone confer no advantage. Do not advance relying on sheer military power. +- Sun Tzu + +Generally management of the many is the same as generally management of the few, it's a matter of organization. +- Sun Tzu + +He who knows when he can fight and when he cannot will be victorious. +- Sun Tzu + +In peace, sons bury their fathers, in war, fathers bury their sons. +- Herodotus + +Far better is to have a stout heart always and suffer one's share of evils, than to be ever fearing what may happen. +- Herodotus + +After the war is over, make alliances +- Greek proverb + +Fortis cadere, cedere non potest. +A brave man may fall, but he cannot yield. +- Latin proverb + +Victory loves prudence. +- Latin proverb + +Flet victus, victor interiit. +The conquered mourns, the conqueror is undone. +- Latin proverb + +Timidi mater non flet. +A coward's mother does not weep. +- Latin proverb + +Arms keep peace +- Latin proverb + +To blunder twice is not allowed in war +- Latin proverb + +The proper arts of a general are judgement and prudence. +- Tacitus + +Great empires are not maintained by timidity. +- Tacitus + +A bad peace is even worse than a war +- Tacitus + +Even the bravest men are frightened by sudden terrors +- Tacitus + +The desire for safety stands against every great and noble enterprise. +- Tacitus + +Valour is the contempt of death and pain. +- Tacitus + +They make a solitude and call it peace. +- Tacitus + +Every care must be taken that our auxiliaries, being stronger than our citizens, may not grow too much for them and become savage beasts. +- Plato + +Only the dead have seen the end of the war. +- Plato + +The rulers of the State are the only ones who should have the privilege of lying +- Plato + +I think the slain care little if they sleep or rise again. +- Aeschylus + +A people's voice is dangerous when charged with wrath. +- Aeschylus + +In war we must always leave room for strokes of fortune, and accidents that cannot be foreseen. +- Polybius + +A good general not only sees the way to victory, he also knows when victory is impossible. +- Polybius + +Bella detesta matribus. +Wars are the dread of mothers. +- Horace + +Quae caret ora cruore nostro? +What coast knows not our blood? +- Horace + +Dulce et decorum est pro patria mori. +It is a sweet and seemly thing to die for one's country. +- Horace + +Adversity reveals the genius of a general; good fortune conceals it +- Horace + +A wise man in times of peace prepares for war. +- Horace + +A collision at sea can ruin your entire day. +- Thucydides + +The strong did what they could, and the weak suffered what they must. +- Thucydides + +Self-control is the chief element in self respect, and self-respect is the chief element in courage. +- Thucydides + +The true contempt of an invader is shown by deeds of valour in the field. +- Hermocrates of Syracuse + +They have an abundance of gold and silver, and these make war, like other things, go smoothly. +- Hermocrates of Syracuse + +When there is mutual fear, men think twice before they make aggression upon one another. +- Hermocrates + +Nobody is driven in to war by ignorance, and no one who thinks he will gain anything from it is deterred by fear. +- Hermocrates + +Even the bravest cannot fight beyond his strength. +- Euripides + +The god of war hates those who hesitate. +- Euripides + +Danger gleams like sunshine to a brave man's eyes. +- Euripides + +A large army is always disorderly. +- Euripides + +Fas est et ab hoste doceri. +It is right to learn, even from the enemy. +- Ovid + +The gods favour the bold. +- Ovid + +Armed forces abroad are of little value unless there is prudent counsel at home. +- Cicero + +The sinews of war are infinite money. +- Cicero + +War is not so much a matter of weapons, as of money. +- Cicero + +Silent enim leges inter arma + +Laws are silent in times of war +- Cicero + +War, as the saying goes, is full of false alarms. +- Aristotle + +We make war that we may live in peace. +- Aristotle + +The wise man speaks because he has something to say, the fool because he has to say something +- Aristotle + +It is a bad plan that cannot be altered. +- Publilius Syrus + +Pardon one offence and you encourage the commission of many +- Publilius Syrus + +We should provide in peace what we need in war +- Publilius Syrus + +The cruelty of war makes for peace. +- Publilius Syrus + +Necessity knows no law except to conquer. +- Publilius Syrus + +He is best secure from dangers who is on his guard even when he seems safe. +- Publilius Syrus + +In war important events result from trivial causes. +- Gaius Julius Caesar + +War gives the right of the conquerors to impose any conditions they please upon the vanquished. +- Gaius Julius Caesar + +Veni, vidi, vici. + +I came, I saw, I conquered. +- Gaius Julius Caesar + +Alea iacta est + +The die is cast +- Gaius Julius Caesar + +If you must break the law, do it to seize power, in all other cases observe it. +- Gaius Julius Caesar + +Men of Athens, there is not much time for exhortation, but to the brave a few words are as good as many. +- Hippocrates + +War is the only proper school of the surgeon. +- Hippocrates + +If a man does not know to what port he is sailing, no wind is favourable. +- Seneca + +The fortunes of war are always doubtful +- Seneca + +Constant exposure to dangers will breed contempt for them. +- Seneca + +Against danger it pays to be prepared. +- Aesop + +Brave men are a city's strongest tower of defence. +- Alcaeus + +A dead enemy always smells good. +- Aulus Vitellius + +Cry "Havoc!" and let slip the dogs of war. +- Shakespeare: Julius Caesar, III, 1 + +He conquers who endures. +- Persius + +Extraordinary rains pretty generally fall after great battles. +- Plutarch + +I am more afraid of our own mistakes than of our enemies' designs. +- Pericles + +When one side goes against the enemy with the gods' gift of stronger morale, then their adversaries, as a rule, cannot withstand them. +- Xenophon + +Bella, horida bella! +Wars, horrid wars! +- Virgil + +Willing obedience always beats forced obedience +- Xenophon + +Soldiers do not like being under the command of one who is not of noble birth. +- Onosander + +To an imperial city nothing is inconsistent which is expedient. +- Euphemus of Athens + +In the moment of action remember the value of silence and order. +- Phormio of Athens + +If a man does not strike first, he will be first struck. +- Athenogoras of Syracuse + +Fortes fortuna adiuvat. +Fortune favours the brave. +- Terence + +In war we must be speedy. +- Silius Italicus + +Learn to obey before you command. +- Solon of Athens + +Varus, give me back my legions. +- Augustus Caesar: After the defeat and annihilation of Varus' column in Teutoberg Forest + +The Spartans do not ask how many enemies but where they are. +- Agis II of Sparta + +Come home with this shield, or upon it. +- A Spartan mother equips her son + +Who was the first that forged the deadly blade? Of rugged steel his savage soul was made. +- Tibullus + +A small country cannot contend with a great; the few cannot contend with the many; and the weak cannot contend with the strong +- Mencius + +A disorderly mob is no more an army than a heap of building materials is a house +- Socrates + +To brave men, the prizes that war offers are liberty and fame +- Lycurgus of Sparta + +War spares not the brave but the cowardly +- Anacreon + +It is the noblest and safest thing for a great army to be visibly animated by one spirit +- Archidamus of Sparta + +Ah! The generals! They are numerous but not good for much! +- Aristophanes + +Let them hate us as long as they fear us +- Caligula + +To lead untrained people to war is to throw them away +- Confucius + +Only the brave enjoy noble and glorious deaths +- Dionysius + +The walls shall shake at the noise of the horsemen, and of the wheels, and of the chariots +- Ezekiel, XXVI, 10 + +Alta sedent civilis vulnera dextrae +Deep are the wounds that civil strife inflicts +- Lucan + +It is pleasant, when the sea is high and the winds are dashing the waves about, to watch from the shores the struggles of another +- Lucretius + +Hannibal knew how to gain a victory, but not how to use it +- Maharbal + +The man who runs away will fight again +- Menander + +An alliance with the powerful is never to be trusted +- Phaedrus + +War is sweet to those who have never experienced it +- Pindar + +How are the mighty fallen in the midst of battle! +- II Samuel, I, 25 + +March divided and fight concentrated +- Military maxim + +Divide and conquer +- Military maxim + +Nothing happens to anybody which he is not fitted by nature to bear +-Marcus Aurelius |
