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Love of honor is a very shady sort of possession.
Herodotus
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Herodotus
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Herodotus of Halicarnassus
Herodotus
Father of History
Honor
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Shady
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More quotes by Herodotus
Before a man dies, hold back and call him not happy but lucky.
Herodotus
It is said that as many days as there are in the whole journey, so many are the men and horses that stand along the road, each horse and man at the interval of a days journey and these are stayed neither by snow nor rain nor heat nor darkness from accomplishing their appointed course with all speed.
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Happiness is not fame or riches or heroic virtues, but a state that will inspire posterity to think in reflecting upon our life, that it was the life they would wish to live.
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The wooden wall alone should remain unconquered.
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Circumstances rule men men do not rule circumstances.
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A man trusts his ears less than his eyes.
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The hastening of any undertaking begets error, from which great losses are wont to come.
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Mens fortunes are on a wheel, which in its turning suffers not the same man to prosper for ever.
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As the old saw says well: every end does not appear together with its beginning.
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The man of affluence is not in fact more happy than the possessor of a bare competency, unless, in addition to his wealth, the end of his life be fortunate. We often see misery dwelling in the midst of splendour, whilst real happiness is found in humbler stations.
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Let there be nothing untried for nothing happens by itself, but men obtain all things by trying.
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But this I know: if all mankind were to take their troubles to market with the idea of exchanging them, anyone seeing what his neighbor's troubles were like would be glad to go home with his own.
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For of those [cities] that were great in earlier times, most of them have now become small, while those which were great in my time were small formerly.
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The most hateful human misfortune is for a wise man to have no influence.
Herodotus
But if you know that you are a man too, and that even such are those that rule, learn this first of all: that all human affairs are a wheel which, as it turns, does not allow the same men always to be fortunate.
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Envy is so natural to human kind, that it cannot but arise.
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Force has no place where there is need of skill.
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Great things are won by great dangers.
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We have two useless gods who never leave our island, but like to dwell in it constantly, Poverty and Helplessness.
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A man calumniated is doubly injured -- first by him who utters the calumny, and then by him who believes it.
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