Dum vivimus vivamus
Dum vivimus vivamus is a Latin phrase that means "While we live, let us live."[1][2] It is often taken to be an epicurean declaration.[1]
This Latin phrase was the motto of Philip Doddridge's coat of arms.[3]
Usage
It serves as the motto for Porcellian Club at Harvard. Emily Dickinson used the line in a whimsical valentine written to William Howland in 1852 and subsequently published in the Springfield Daily Republican:[4]
Sic transit gloria mundi
How doth the busy bee,
Dum vivimus vivamus,
I stay my enemy!
It was also the motto inscribed on the sword of "Oscar" Gordon, the protagonist of Robert Heinlein's 1963 book "Glory Road".
Notes
References
- Orton, Job (1766). Memoirs of the Life, Character and Writings of the Late Reverend Philip Doddridge. J. Eddowes.
- Benson Sewall, Richard (1994). The Life of Emily Dickinson, Volumes 1-2. Harvard University Press.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 8/11/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.