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To be fortunate is God, and more than God to mortals.
Aeschylus
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Aeschylus
Dramatist
Playwright
Tragedy Writer
Warrior
Elefsina
Æschylus
Aeschylos
Mortals
Fortunate
Fortune
More quotes by Aeschylus
By suffering comes wisdom.
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The will was of Zeus, the hand of Hephaestus.
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Everyone is ready to speak ill of a stranger.
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Let there be wealth without tears enough for the wise man who will ask no further.
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There is advantage in the wisdom won from pain.
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Everyone, to those weaker than themselves, is kind.
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Only through suffering do we learn
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God's most lordly gift to man is decency of mind.
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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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Only one accomplishment is beyond both the power and the mercy of the Gods. They cannot make the past as though it had never been.
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The reward of suffering is experience
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Pleasantest of all ties is the tie of host and guest.
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Who apart from the gods is without pain for his whole lifetime's length?
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Nothing forces us to know What we do not want to know Except pain
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The tongue of slander is too prompt with wanton malice to wound the stranger.
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When a man dies, flesh is frayed and broken in the fire, but not his will.
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For know that no one is free, except Zeus.
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The air is Zeus, Zeus earth, and Zeus the heaven, Zeus all that is, and what transcends them all.
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If a man suffers ill, let it be without shame for this is the only profit when we are dead. You will never say a good word about deeds that are evil and disgraceful.
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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.
Aeschylus