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I would rather be ignorant than knowledgeable of evils.
Aeschylus
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Aeschylus
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Elefsina
Æschylus
Aeschylos
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More quotes by Aeschylus
Do not kick against the pricks.
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And one who is just of his own free will shall not lack for happiness and he will never come to utter ruin.
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Arrogance is truly the child of impiety, but from health of soul comes happiness, dear to all, much prayed for.
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The man whose authority is recent is always stern.
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Chorus: Zeus, who guided men to think who laid it down that wisdom comes alone through suffering. Still there drips in sleep against the heart grief of memory against our pleasure we are temperate.
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Delay not to seize the hour!
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I, schooled in misery, know many purifying rites, and I know where speech is proper and where silence.
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Human prosperity never rests but always craves more, till blown up with pride it totters and falls. From the opulent mansions pointed at by all passers-by none warns it away, none cries, 'Let no more riches enter!'.
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So in the Libyan fable it is told That once an eagle, stricken with a dart, Said, when he saw the fashion of the shaft: With our own feathers, not by others' hands, Are we now smitten.
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Art is far feebler than necessity.
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Be it mine to draw from wisdom's fount, pure as it flows, that calm of soul which virtue only knows.
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You shall learn, though late, the lesson of how to be discreet.
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We shall perish by guile just as we slew.
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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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Out of respect, a man must veil his words when talking with a woman, but with a man he can frankly say whatever's on his mind.
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Fear hurries on my tongue through want of courage.
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May dawn, as the proverb goes, bring happy tidings coming from her mother night.
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Black smoke, the flickering sister of fire.
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Justice, voiceless, unseen, seeth thee when thou sleepest and when thou goest forth and when thou liest down. Continually doth she attend thee, now aslant thy course, now at a later time. These lines are from a section of doubtful or spurious fragments.
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For this our task hath Fate spun without fail to last for ever sure, that we on man weighed down with deeds of hate should follow till the earth his life immure. Nor when he dies can he boast of being truly free.
Aeschylus