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They who prosper take on airs of vanity.
Aeschylus
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Aeschylus
Dramatist
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Elefsina
Æschylus
Aeschylos
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More quotes by Aeschylus
When a man takes the road to destruction, the gods help him along.
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If you are not envied, you are not enviable.
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For a deadly blow let him pay with a deadly blow: it is for him who has done a deed to suffer.
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To learn is to be young, however old.
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For Hades is mighty in calling men to account below the earth, and with a mind that records in tablets he surveys all things.
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Misfortune wandering the same track lights now upon one and now upon another.
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Ares gives his verdict without witnesses.
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The reward of suffering is experience
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It is like a woman indeed To take rapture before the fact is shown for true. They believe too easily, are too quick to shift From ground to ground and swift indeed The rumor voiced by a woman dies again.
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Better to die on your feet than live on your knees.
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Unjustly men hate death, which is the greatest defence against their many ills.
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If a man should wanton walk with crime ... he shall find in death no great deliverance.
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The man who does ill, ill must suffer too.
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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.
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Yet though a man gets many wounds in breast, He dieth not, unless the appointed time, The limit of his life's span, coincide Nor does the man who by the hearth at home Sits still, escape the doom that Fate decrees.
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The gods at will can shape a gladder strain, and from the lamentations at the graveside, a song of triumph may arise.
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Ask the gods nothing excessive.
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Against necessity, against its strength, no one can fight and win.
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Of all the gods, Death only craves not gifts: Nor sacrifice, nor yet drink-offering poured Avails no altars hath he, nor is soothed By hymns of praise. From him alone of all The powers of heaven Persuasion holds aloof.
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The force of necessity is irresistible.
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