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Dum vivimus vivamus : ウィキペディア英語版 | Dum vivimus vivamus
''Dum vivimus vivamus'' is a Latin phrase that means "While we live, let us live."〔(【引用サイトリンク】publisher=Dictionary.com )〕 It is often taken to be an epicurean declaration.〔 This latin phrase was the motto of Philip Doddridge's coat of arms.〔(Orton, Job, Memoirs of the Life, Character and Writings of the Late Reverend Philip Doddridge, p. 145. )〕 == 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'':〔(Benson Sewall, Richard, The Life of Emily Dickinson, Volumes 1-2, p. 450. )〕
''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".
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