Care will kill a cat, but ye canna live without 15 it. Sc. Pr.

Carica volontario non carica—A willing burden is no burden. It. Pr.

Car il n'est si beau jour qui n'amène sa nuit—There is no day, however glorious, but sets in night. Fr.

Carior est illis homo quam sibi—Man is dearer to them (i.e., the gods) than to himself. Juv.

Cari sunt parentes, cari liberi, propinqui, familiares; sed omnes omnium caritates, patria una complexa est—Dear are our parents, dear our children, our relatives, and our associates, but all our affections for all these are embraced in our affection for our native land. Cic.

Carmen perpetuum primaque origine mundi 20 ad tempora nostra—A song for all ages, and from the first origin of the world to our own times. Transposed from Ovid.

Carmen triumphale—A song of triumph.

Carmina nil prosunt; nocuerunt carmina quondam—My rhymes are of no use; they once wrought me harm. Ovid.

Carmina spreta exolescunt; si irascare, agnita videntur—Abuse, if you slight it, will gradually die away; but if you show yourself irritated, you will be thought to have deserved it. Tac.

Carmine di superi placantur, carmine Manes—The gods above and the gods below are alike propitiated by song. Hor.