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Man's best possession is a sympathetic wife.
Euripides
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Euripides
Playwright
Tragedy Writer
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Ancient Athens
Men
Sympathetic
Possession
Marriage
Wife
Best
More quotes by Euripides
Love's all in all to women.
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God hates violence. He has ordained that all men fairly possess their property, not seize it.
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Lucky is the man who has been successful with his children and not got ones who are notorious disasters.
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Woman is woman's natural ally.
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Delusive hope still points to distant good.
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A second wife is hateful to the children of the first A viper is not more hateful.
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To the worker, God himself lends aid.
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What can we take on trust in this uncertain life? Happiness, greatness, pride - nothing is secure, nothing keeps.
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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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The best of seers is he who guesses well.
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Oh, trebly blest the placid lot of those whose hearth foundations are in pure love laid, where husband's breast with tempered ardor glows, and wife, oft mother, is in heart a maid!
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New faces have more authority than accustomed ones.
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Women's love is for their men, not for their children.
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The first requisite to happiness is that a man be born in a famous city.
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Surely again, to heal men's wounds by music's spell.
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He is life's liberating force. He is release of limbs and communion through dance. He is laughter, and music in flutes. He is repose from all cares -- he is sleep! When his blood bursts from the grape and flows across tables laid in his honor to fuse with our blood, he gently, gradually, wraps us in shadows of ivy-cool sleep.
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Nothing's as good as holding on to safety.
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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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Life is short, yet sweet.
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They who are sad find somehow sweetness in tears.
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