Author: Baltasar Gracián
Cites
- Horace (1)
- IN: The art of prudence: or, a companion for a man of sense written originally in Spanish by that Celebrated Author Balthazar Gracian; now made English from the best Edition of the Original, and illustrated with the Sieur Amelot de la Houssaie's notes. By Mr. Savage. (1705) Non-Fiction, NULL
EPIGRAPH: Principibus placuisse Viris non ultima Laus est. Non cuivis Homini contingit adire Corinthium.
FROM: Epistularum liber primus (Ad Scaeva), (-20), Poem, Italy
Cited by
- Linda Buckley-Archer (1)
- IN: The Many Lives of John Stone (2015) Fantasy, Historical Fiction, Young Adult Fiction, British
EPIGRAPH: There is no desert like that of living without friends.
FROM: The Art of Worldly Wisdom, (1647), Book, Spain
- Vitomil Zupan (1)
- IN: Minuet for Guitar (2011) Fiction, NULL
EPIGRAPH: Nothing really belongs to us but time, which even he has who has nothing else.
FROM: NULL, (1653), NULL, Spain
- Shilpi Somaya Gowda (1)
- IN: The Golden Son (2016) Fiction, NULL
EPIGRAPH: When you counsel someone, you should appear to be reminding him of something he had forgotten, not of the light he was unable to see.
FROM: The Art of Worldly Wisdom, (1647), Book, Spain
- Diane Duane (1)
- IN: A Wizard of Mars (2010) Fiction, American
EPIGRAPH: Truth is always late, always last to arrive, limping along with Time.
FROM: The Art of Worldly Wisdom, (1647), Book, Spain