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Repulsae Nescia

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Latin motto
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Repulsae Nescia is a Latin phrase meaning "ignorant of defeat" in English. The longer phrase from Horace, Virtus Repulsae Nescia, is often translated as "courage knows no defeat".

History

It is found in Horace: Odes, III., 2, 17. The following passage:

Virtus repulsae nescia sordidae
Intaminatis fulget honoribus,
Nec sumit aut ponit securis
Arbitrio popularis aurae.

was translated by Conington as:

True Virtue never knows defeat:
Her robes she keeps unsullied still;
Nor take, nor quits, her curule seat,
To please a people's veering will.

Usage as a motto

See also

References

  1. Lasell College: Traditions
  2. "Horace: Odes III".
  3. Dictionary of quotations (Classical). S. Sonnenschein & Co. 1906. p. 303.
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