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Delight in splendor is No more than happiness with little: for both Have their appeal.
Euripides
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Euripides
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Ancient Athens
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Better a serpent than a stepmother!
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A rare spoil for a man Is the winning of a good wife very Plentiful are the worthless women.
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Toil, says the proverb, is the sire of fame.
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There is nothing more hostile to a city that a tyrant, under whom in the first and chiefest place, there are not laws in common, but one man, keeping the law himself to himself, has the sway, and this is no longer equal.
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Fortune always will confer an aura of worth, unworthily and in this world The lucky person passes for a genius.
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Of all things upon earth that bleed and grow, a herb most bruised is woman.
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Human excellence means nothing Unless it works with the consent of God.
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In this world second thoughts, it seems, are best.
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Numbers are a fearful thing.
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The wise with hope support the pains of life.
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Do not grieve so much for a husband lost that it wastes away your life.
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I think that fortune watcheth o'er our lives, surer than we. But well said: he who strives will find his goals strive for him equally.
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Where there are two, one cannot be wretched, and one not.
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In my opinion, the unjust man whose tongue is full of glozing rhetoric, merits the heaviest punishment vaunting that he can with his tongue gloze over injustice, he dares to act wickedly, yet he is not over-wise.
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