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Much effort, much prosperity.
Euripides
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Euripides
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Ancient Athens
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Much
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Prosperity
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Effort
More quotes by Euripides
Some men never find prosperity, For all their voyaging, While others find it with no voyaging.
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O lady, nobility is thine, and thy form is the reflection of thy nature!
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New faces have more authority than accustomed ones.
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The first requisite to happiness is that a man be born in a famous city.
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Character is a stamp of good repute on a person.
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When love is in excess, it brings a man no honor, no worthiness.
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Judge a tree from its fruit, not from its leaves.
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Lucky that man whose children make his happiness in life and not his grief, the anguished disappointment of his hopes.
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Lady, the sun's light to our eyes is dear, And fair the tranquil reaches of the sea, And flowery earth in May, and bounding waters And so right many fair things I might praise Yet nothing is so radiant and so fair As for souls childless, with desire sore-smitten, To see the light of babes about the house.
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This is slavery, not to speak one's thought.
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A woman should always stand by a woman.
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'Twas but my tongue, 'twas not my soul that swore.
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O virtue, I have followed you through life, and find you at last but a shade.
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It is better that we live ever so Miserably than die in glory.
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That mortal is a fool who, prospering, thinks his life has any strong foundation since our fortune's course of action is the reeling way a madman takes, and no one person is ever happy all the time.
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There is something in the pang of change more than the heart can bear, unhappiness remembering happiness.
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Who cannot open an honest mind No friend will he be of mine.
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The brash unbridled tongue, the lawless folly of fools, will end in pain. But the life of wise content is blest with quietness, escapes the storm and keeps its house secure.
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Too much zeal offends where indirection works.
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Who knows but life be that which men call death, And death what men call life?
Euripides