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Take courage pain's extremity soon ends.
Aeschylus
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Aeschylus
Dramatist
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Elefsina
Æschylus
Aeschylos
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Courage
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Extremity
More quotes by Aeschylus
To learn is to be young, however old.
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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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May dawn, as the proverb goes, bring happy tidings coming from her mother night.
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But I must bear my destiny as best I can, knowing well that there is no resisting the strength of necessity.
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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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For by the will of the gods Fate hath held sway since ancient days.
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It is always in season for old men to learn.
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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.
Aeschylus
I have learned to hate all traitors, and there is no disease that I spit on more than treachery.
Aeschylus
God always strives together with those who strive.
Aeschylus
Wisdom comes alone through suffering.
Aeschylus
If you pour oil and vinegar into the same vessel, you would call them not friends but opponents.
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When strength is yoked with justice, where is a mightier pair than they?
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The cure is in the house, not brought by other hands from distant places, but by its own, in agony and blood.
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Wiles and deceit are female qualities.
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When we sleep the soul is lit up... by many eyes, and with them, we can see everything that we cannot see in the daytime.
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Unjustly men hate death, which is the greatest defence against their many ills.
Aeschylus
This is a sickness rooted and inherent in the nature of a tyranny: that he that holds it does not trust his friends.
Aeschylus
I pray the gods some respite from the weary task of this long year's watch that lying on the Atreidae's roof on bended arm, dog- like, I have kept, marking the conclave of all night's stars, those potentates blazing in the heavens that bring winter and summer to mortal men, the constellations, when they wane, when they rise.
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But when the dust has drunk the blood of men, no resurrection comes for one who's dead.
Aeschylus