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The half is greater than the whole.
Hesiod
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Hesiod
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Hesiodus
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More quotes by Hesiod
Only fools need suffer to learn.
Hesiod
Man's chiefest treasure is a sparing tongue.
Hesiod
A man fashions ill for himself who fashions ill for another, and the ill design is most ill for the designer.
Hesiod
Inhibition is no good provider for a needy man, Inhibition, which does men great harm and great good. Inhibition attaches to poverty, boldness to wealth.
Hesiod
Inhibition is no good provider for a needy man
Hesiod
Admire a small ship, but put your freight in a large one for the larger the load, the greater will be the profit upon profit.
Hesiod
Bring a wife home to your house when you are of the right age, not far short of 30 years, nor much above this is the right time for marriage.
Hesiod
A man who works evil against another works it really against himself, and bad advice is worst for the one who devised it
Hesiod
Invite the man that loves thee to a feast, but let alone thine enemy.
Hesiod
The best man of all is he who knows everything himself. Good also the man who accepts another's sound advice but the man who neither knows himself nor takes to hear what another says, he is no good at all.
Hesiod
In the race for wealth, a neighbor tries to outdo his neighbor, but this strife is good for men. For the potter envies potter, and the carpenter the carpenter, and the beggar rivals the beggar, and the singer the singer.
Hesiod
Justice prevails over transgression when she comes to the end of the race.
Hesiod
Drink your fill when the jar is first opened, and when it is nearly done, but be sparing when it is half-empty it's a poor savingwhen you come to the dregs.
Hesiod
He's only harming himself who's bent upon harming another
Hesiod
This man, I say, is most perfect who shall have understood everything for himself, after having devised what may be best afterward and unto the end.
Hesiod
In work there is no shame shame is in the idleness.
Hesiod
The potter is at enmity with the potter.
Hesiod
It is not possible either to trick or escape the mind of Zeus.
Hesiod
The fool knows after he has suffered.
Hesiod
Toil is no source of shame idleness is shame.
Hesiod