Share
×
Inspirational Quotes
Authors
Professions
Topics
Tags
Quote
It is in the character of very few men to honor without envy a friend who has prospered.
Aeschylus
Share
Change background
T
T
T
Change font
Original
TAGS & TOPICS
Aeschylus
Dramatist
Playwright
Tragedy Writer
Warrior
Elefsina
Æschylus
Aeschylos
Friendship
Honor
Friend
Agamemnon
Character
Prospered
Without
Envied
Men
Jealousy
Jealous
Envy
More quotes by Aeschylus
I warn the marauder dragging plunder, chaotic, rich beyond all rights: he'll strike his sails, harried at long last, stunned when the squalls of torment break his spars to bits.
Aeschylus
We shall perish by guile just as we slew.
Aeschylus
Only when a man's life comes to its end in prosperity dare we pronounce him happy.
Aeschylus
For wherein is life sweet to him who suffers grief?
Aeschylus
If you are not envied, you are not enviable.
Aeschylus
Married love between man and woman is bigger than oaths guarded by right of nature.
Aeschylus
The man who does ill, ill must suffer too.
Aeschylus
Don't you know this, that words are doctors to a diseased temperment?
Aeschylus
Black smoke, the flickering sister of fire.
Aeschylus
Oh, it is easy for the one who stands outside the prison-wall of pain to exhort and teach the one who suffers.
Aeschylus
Of prosperity mortals can never have enough.
Aeschylus
And one who is just of his own free will shall not lack for happiness and he will never come to utter ruin.
Aeschylus
Whoever is just willingly and without compulsion will not lack happiness he will never be utterly destroyed.
Aeschylus
God lends a helping hand to the man who tries hard.
Aeschylus
The holy heaven yearns to wound the earth, and yearning layeth hold on the earth to join in wedlock the rain, fallen from the amorous heaven, impregnates the earth, and it bringeth forth for mankind the food of flocks and herds and Demeter's gifts and from that moist marriage-rite the woods put on their bloom.
Aeschylus
In few men is it part of nature to respect a friend's prosperity without begrudging him.
Aeschylus
The adulterer dies. An old custom, justice.
Aeschylus
For it would be better to die once and for all than to suffer pain for all one's life.
Aeschylus
The field of doom bears death as its harvest.
Aeschylus
O Death the Healer, scorn thou not, I pray, To come to me: of cureless ills thou art The one physician. Pain lays not its touch Upon a corpse.
Aeschylus