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Two friends, two bodies with one soul inspired.
Homer
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Homer
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Homerus
Homeros
Mæonides
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Friends
More quotes by Homer
To speak his thoughts is every freeman's right, in peace and war, in council and in fight.
Homer
They did not know her-gods are hard for mortals to recognize.
Homer
Friend, many and many a dream is mere confusion a cobweb of no consequence at all. Two gates for ghostly dreams there are: One gateway of honest horn, and one of ivory. Issuing by the ivory gate are dreams of glimmering illusion, fantasies, but those that come through solid polished horn may be borne out, if mortals only know them.
Homer
All men have need of the gods.
Homer
In every sorrowing soul I pour'd delight, And poverty stood smiling in my sight.
Homer
Proud is the spirit of Zeus-fostered kings - their honor comes from Zeus, and Zeus, god of council, loves them.
Homer
Better to live or die, once and for all, than die by inches.
Homer
What is this word that broke through the fence of your teeth, Atreides?
Homer
I discovered a meal between breakfast and brunch.
Homer
It is always the latest song that an audience applauds the most.
Homer
I'm a people person...who drinks.
Homer
Go on with a spirit that fears nothing.
Homer
It never was our guise to slight the poor, or aught humane despise.
Homer
It is no bad thing to be a king-to see one's house enriched and one's authority enhanced.
Homer
It is equally bad when one speeds on the guest unwilling to go, and when he holds back one who is hastening. Rather one should befriend the guest who is there, but speed him when he wishes.
Homer
I would rather be tied to the soil as a serf... than be king of all these dead and destroyed.
Homer
Just are the ways of heaven from Heaven proceed The woes of man: Heaven doom'd the Greeks to bleed.
Homer
I'm a rageaholic. I just can't live without rageahol.
Homer
Men in their generations are like the leaves of the trees. The wind blows and one year's leaves are scattered on the ground but the trees burst into bud and put on fresh ones when the spring comes round.
Homer
[But] age, the common enemy of mankind, has laid his hand upon you would that it had fallen upon some other, and that you were still young.
Homer