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Oall the creatures that creep and breathe on earth, there is none more wretched than man.
Homer
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Homer
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More quotes by Homer
O Friends, be men, and let your hearts be strong And let no warrior in the heat of fight, Do what may bring him shame in others' eyes
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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.
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[B]ut it is only what happens, when they die, to all mortals. The sinews no longer hold the flesh and the bones together, and once the spirit has let the white bones, all the rest of the body is made subject to the fire's strong fury, but the soul flitters out like a dream and flies away.
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We all scribble poetry.
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A sound mind in a manly body.
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Marge, when I join an underground cult I expect a little support from my family.
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What is this word that broke through the fence of your teeth, Atreides?
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I'm not a bath man myself. More of a cologne man.
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Over the wine-dark sea.
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A decent boldness ever meets with friends.
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Wine lead to folly, making even the wise to laugh immoderately, to dance, and to utter what had better have been kept silent.
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The chance of war Is equal, and the slayer oft is slain.
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I've finally tapped into that spirit of self-destruction that makes rock-n-roll the king of music!
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For afterwards a man finds pleasure in his pains, when he has suffered long and wandered long. So I will tell you what you ask and seek to know.
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Whoever among men who walk the Earth has seen these Mysteries is blessed, but whoever in uninitiated and has not received his share of the rite, he will not have the same lot as the others, once he is dead and dwells in the mould where the sun goes down.
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One rogue leads another.
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Sleep and Death, who are twin brothers.
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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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Without a sign, his sword the brave man draws, and asks no omen, but his country's cause.
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I should rather labor as another's serf, in the home of a man without fortune, one whose livelihood was meager, than rule over all the departed dead.
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