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Dead men have no victory.
Euripides
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Euripides
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Tragedy Writer
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Ancient Athens
Victory
Dead
Men
More quotes by Euripides
This is what it means to be a slave to be abused and bear it compelled by violence to suffer wrong.
Euripides
The care of God for us is a great thing, if a man believe it at heart: it plucks the burden of sorrow from him.
Euripides
The divine power moves with difficulty, but at the same time surely.
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Give a wise man an honest brief to plead and his eloquence is no remarkable achievement.
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O virtue, I have followed you through life, and find you at last but a shade.
Euripides
Slow but sure moves the might of the gods.
Euripides
Oh, what a power is motherhood, possessing a potent spell. Love, Light, Blessings
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The way of God is complex, he is hard for us to predict. He moves the pieces and they come somehow into a kind of order.
Euripides
If there are none [gods], All our toil is without meaning.
Euripides
Power gives no purchase to the hand, it will not hold, soon perishes, and greatness goes.
Euripides
All is change all yields its place and goes.
Euripides
Better a serpent than a stepmother!
Euripides
I would rather die on my feet than live on my knees.
Euripides
If I could remake the world, I'd banish women, send them away with all their trouble. Then children would come from a purer source.
Euripides
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.
Euripides
Blood streams in sacrifice yet anguish finds no cure.
Euripides
The wife should yield in all things to her lord
Euripides
Few have greater riches than the joy That comes to us in visions, In dreams which nobody can take away.
Euripides
The first requisite to happiness is that a man be born in a famous city.
Euripides
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.
Euripides