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Old age hath stronger sense of right than youth.
Aeschylus
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Aeschylus
Dramatist
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Elefsina
Æschylus
Aeschylos
Hath
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More quotes by Aeschylus
Once to die is better than length of days in sorrow without end.
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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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Neither a life of anarchy nor a life under a despot should you praise. To all that lies in the middle has a god given excellence.
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Obedience, you know, is Good Luck's mother, wedded to Salvation, they say.
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Justice shines in very smoky homes, and honors the righteous but the gold-spangled mansions where the hands are unclean she leaves with eyes averted.
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God is not averse to deceit in a holy cause.
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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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Alas for the affairs of men! When they are fortunate you might compare them to a shadow and if they are unfortunate, a wet sponge with one dash wipes the picture away.
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Pleasantest of all ties is the tie of host and guest.
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The man who does ill, ill must suffer too.
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If you will take me as your teacher, you will not kick against the pricks.
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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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Necessity is stronger far than art.
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Against necessity, against its strength, no one can fight and win.
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A god implants in mortal guilt whenever he wants utterly to confound a house.
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If you pour oil and vinegar into the same vessel, you would call them not friends but opponents.
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Ye waves That o'er th' interminable ocean wreathe Your crisped smiles.
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The high strength of men knows no content with limitation.
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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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The holy heaven yearns to wound the earth, and yearning layeth hold on the earth to join in wedlock the rain, fallen from the amorous heaven, impregnates the earth, and it bringeth forth for mankind the food of flocks and herds and Demeter's gifts and from that moist marriage-rite the woods put on their bloom.
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