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No whispered rumours which the many spread can wholly perish.
Hesiod
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Hesiod
Mythographer
Poet
Rhapsode
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Hesiodus
Whispered
Wholly
Spread
Many
Rumours
Perish
More quotes by Hesiod
Work is not a shame. Laziness is a shame.
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A sparing tongue is the greatest treasure among men.
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We know how to speak many falsehoods that resemble real things, but we know, when we will, how to speak true things.
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He's only harming himself who's bent upon harming another
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A man who works evil against another works it really against himself, and bad advice is worst for the one who devised it
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Whoever has trusted a woman has trusted deceivers.
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He is a fool who tries to match his strength with the stronger.
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He harms himself who does harm to another, and the evil plan is most harmful to the planner.
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Only fools need suffer to learn.
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Invite your friend to a feast, but leave your enemy alone and especially invite the one who lives near you.
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Let the price fixed with a friend be sufficient, and even dealing with a brother call in witnesses, but laughingly.
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So the people will pay the penalty for their kings' presumption, who, by devising evil, turn justice from her path with tortuous speech.
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It is best to do things systematically, since we are only human, and disorder is our worst enemy.
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They are fools who do not know how much the half exceeds the whole.
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There is also an evil report light, indeed, and easy to raise, but difficult to carry, and still more difficult to get rid of.
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The potter is at enmity with the potter.
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But he who neither thinks for himself nor learns from others, is a failure as a man.
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And Zeus will destroy this race of mortal men too, when they, at their birth, have grey hair on their temples.
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For a man wins nothing better than a good wife, and then again nothing deadlier than a bad one.
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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.
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