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Carpe diem is Latin for (approximately) "seize the day" or "enjoy the moment". This rule of life is found in the "Odes" (I, 11.8) of the Roman poet Horace (65 - 8 BC), where it reads:
It is quoted accordingly either as a demand not to waste somebody's time with useless things, or as a justification for pleasure and joy of life with little fear for the future. This idea was popular in 16th and 17th-century English poetry, for example in Robert Herrick's To the Virgins, to Make Much of Time, which begins "Gather ye rosebuds while ye may".
Among the Horation themes treated by Herrick was that of carpe diem, "seize the day", the famous motto of Odes 1.11. Another of Herrick's poems, His Age includes the lines:
And:
This theme is also recalled in the verses of English Victorian poet Tennyson, and in Andrew Marvell's To His Coy Mistress.
A song in William Shakespeare's play Twelfth Night has been referred to as "Carpe Diem", although the phrase itself is not mentioned in it:
Robin Williams' character as a teacher of a boys' boarding school in the film Dead Poets Society uses it:
The title of a Terry Pratchett novel is Carpe Jugulum, meaning "Go for the throat."
Metallica's 1997 release Reload also features a song entitled "Carpe Diem Baby", which encourages the listener to "come squeeze and suck the day / Come Carpe Diem Baby."