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Do not put all your goods in hollow ships.
Hesiod
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Hesiod
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Hesiodus
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More quotes by Hesiod
Aerial spirits, by great Jove design'd To be on earth the guardians of mankind: Invisible to mortal eyes they go, And mark our actions, good or bad, below: The immortal spies with watchful care preside, And thrice ten thousand round their charges glide: They can reward with glory or with gold, A power they by Divine permission hold.
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
Hunger is an altogether fit companion for the idle man.
Hesiod
There is also an evil report light, indeed, and easy to raise, but difficult to carry, and still more difficult to get rid of.
Hesiod
You trust a thief when you trust a woman.
Hesiod
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.
Hesiod
An income means life to wretched mortals, but it is a terrible fate to die among the waves.
Hesiod
Whoever has trusted a woman has trusted deceivers.
Hesiod
Work is not a shame. Laziness is a shame.
Hesiod
It is a hard thing for a man to be righteous, if the unrighteous man is to have the greater right.
Hesiod
Toil is no source of shame idleness is shame.
Hesiod
The man who procrastinates is always struggling with misfortunes.
Hesiod
The potter is at enmity with the potter.
Hesiod
Invite the man that loves thee to a feast, but let alone thine enemy.
Hesiod
Whoever, fleeing marriage and the sorrows that women cause, does not wish to wed comes to a deadly old age.
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
Try to take for a mate a person of your own neighborhood.
Hesiod
The Gods rank work above virtues.
Hesiod
Giving is good, but taking is bad and brings death.
Hesiod
Neither make thy friend equal to a brother but if thou shalt have made him so, be not the first to do him wrong.
Hesiod