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Invite the man that loves thee to a feast, but let alone thine enemy.
Hesiod
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Hesiod
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Rhapsode
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Hesiodus
Loves
Enemy
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Feast
Thine
Invite
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Thee
More quotes by Hesiod
Actions from youth, advice from the middle-aged, prayers from the aged.
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Toil is no source of shame idleness is shame.
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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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In work there is no shame shame is in the idleness.
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It is a hard thing for a man to be righteous, if the unrighteous man is to have the greater right.
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A day is sometimes our mother, sometimes our stepmother.
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Evil can be got very easily and exists in quantity: the road to her is very smooth, and she lives near by. But between us and virtue the gods have placed the sweat of our brows the road to her is long and steep, and it is rough at first but when a man has reached the top, then she is easy to attain, although before she was hard.
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A sparing tongue is the greatest treasure among men.
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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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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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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.
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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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Of themselves diseases come upon men continually by day and by night, bringing mischief to mortals silently for wise Zeus took away speech from them. So is there no way to escape the will of Zeus
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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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He's only harming himself who's bent upon harming another
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Do not put your work off till to-morrow and the day after for a sluggish worker does not fill his barn, nor one who puts off his work: industry makes work go well, but a man who puts off work is always at hand-grips with ruin.
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And the evil wish is most evil to the wisher.
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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.
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No whispered rumours which the many spread can wholly perish.
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Man's chiefest treasure is a sparing tongue.
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