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CARPE DIEM - SEIZE THE DAY

 




Carpe Diem  -  Seize the day :
 
 
 
Carpe Diem is a Latin aphorism, usually translated "seize the day", taken from book 1 of the Roman poet Horace's work Odes.
 
 
Carpe Diem used to urge someone to make the most of the present time and give little thought to the future. 
 
 
Enjoy the life in the fullest alienating the undue fear about the future.  Nobody can predict  the  future.   Sometimes  death  comes  knocking  at  the door without  warning. 
 
 
Live with the hunger of enjoying today joyfully without caring for the inevitable death someday.  You will live to enjoy the fragrance of flowers and the sparkling stars in the sky as well as colorful rainbow free of cost.  You learn to enjoy and appreciate beauty. 
 
 
                            
 
 
                        









 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Carpe Diem (Contd...for mobile users)
 
Everyone seek the oxygen from the air and the water from the earth in abundance until you breath your last.
 
 
If you don't enjoy your childhood and youth you will regret about the lost days in your old age.  
 
 
 
                                



 
 
Live life full throttle does not mean neglect your responsibilities and duties towards the fellow beings.  A law abiding citizen fulfill his contribution to the society at large. 
 
 
Society at  large means a system of human organizations generating distinctive cultural patterns and institutions and usually providing protection, security, continuity, and a national identity for its members.
 
 

 

 

 

 
 
Don't  ruin a good today thinking about a bad yesterday.  Let it go.
 
 
Don't count the days, make the days count. 
 
 
 

 
 
Carpe diem – seize the day – is one of the most powerful philosophical ideals to have emerged in Western history. First uttered by the Roman poet Horace over 2,000 years ago, it retains an extraordinary resonance in popular culture.
 
 
 

Carpe Diem - A poem by Robert Frost (early 20th Century)

Age saw two quiet children
Go loving by at twilight,
He knew not whether homeward,
Or outward from the village,
Or (chimes were ringing) churchward,
He waited, (they were strangers)
Till they were out of hearing
To bid them both be happy.
'Be happy, happy, happy,
And seize the day of pleasure.'

The age-long theme is Age's.
'Twas Age imposed on poems
Their gather-roses burden
To warn against the danger
That overtaken lovers
From being over flooded
With happiness should have it.
And yet not know they have it.
But bid life seize the present?
It lives less in the present
Than in the future always,
And less in both together
Than in the past. The present
Is too much for the senses,
Too crowding, too confusing-
Too present to imagine.
 
  
Be happy.  Feel good.  Life is beautiful.  Enjoy the moment.
 
 
 
 

Used to urge someone to make the most of the present time and give little th

 

 

CCar dutiesduties future.



 

 

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