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For a single path leads to the house of Hades.
Aeschylus
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Aeschylus
Dramatist
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Elefsina
Æschylus
Aeschylos
Death
House
Hades
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Path
More quotes by Aeschylus
Old men are children once again a dream that sways and wavers into the hard light of day.
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Ye waves That o'er th' interminable ocean wreathe Your crisped smiles.
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When the black and mortal blood of man has fallen to the ground ... who then can sing spells to call it back again?
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Old men, what are they? Fast fading the leaf, Three-footed they walk, yet frail as a child, As a dream set afloat in the daylight.
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There is no pain so great as the memory of joy in present grief.
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Nor does night conceal men's deeds of ill, but whatsoe'er thou dost, think that some God beholds it.
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It is always in season for old men to learn.
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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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Truly upon mortals cometh swift of foot their evil and his offence upon him that trespasseth against Right.
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No one can count the terrors that the earth spawns, catastrophic, gruesome, and the vast arms of the sea swarm with brute monsters bent on harm, and everywhere between the sky and ground lights bloom by day in flares and sudden bolts and birds and beasts alike can tell of the whirlwind's whirling wrath.
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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 one knowing what is profitable, and not the man knowing many things, is wise.
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Zeus, first cause, prime mover for what thing without Zeus is done among mortals?
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In every tyrant's heart there springs in the end this poison, that he cannot trust a friend.
Aeschylus
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.
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Ares ever loves to pluck all the fairest flower of an armed host.
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It is in the character of very few men to honor without envy a friend who has prospered.
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Time in his aging overtakes all things alike.
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For a murderous blow let murderous blow atone.
Aeschylus
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.
Aeschylus