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Beauty! Terrible Beauty! A deathless Goddess-- so she strikes our eyes!
Homer
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Homer
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Homerus
Homeros
Mæonides
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Beauty
More quotes by Homer
No one can hurry me down to Hades before my time, but if a man's hour is come, be he brave or be he coward, there is no escape for him when he has once been born.
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The tongue of man is a twisty thing, there are plenty of words there of every kind.
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Whatever day Makes man a slave, takes half his worth away.
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Beauty- it was a glorious gift of nature.
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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.
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I hate To tell again a tale once fully told.
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Shoulder-to-shoulder, swing to the work, we must - just two as we are - if we hope to make some headway. The worst cowards, banded together, have their power, but you and I have got the skill to fight their best.
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And here I am using my own lungs like a sucker.
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If you're gonna get mad at me every time I do something stupid, then I guess I'll just have to stop doing stupid things.
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Thus have the gods spun the thread for wretched mortals: that they live in grief while they themselves are without cares for two jars stand on the floor of Zeus of the gifts which he gives, one of evils and another of blessings.
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Do thou restrain the haughty spirit in thy breast, for better far is gentle courtesy.
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We all scribble poetry.
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The minds of the everlasting gods are not changed suddenly.
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Anger, which, far sweeter than trickling drops of honey, rises in the bosom of a man like smoke.
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All my life I've been an obese man trapped inside a fat man's body.
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And endless are the modes of speech, and far Extends from side to side the field of words.
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The long historian of my country's woes.
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A man who has been through bitter experiences and travelled far enjoys even his sufferings after a time
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Insignificant mortals, who are as leaves are, and now flourish and grow warm with life, and feed on what the ground gives, but then again fade away and are dead.
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Modesty is of no use to a beggar.
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