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Who ne'er knew salt, or heard the billows roar.
Homer
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Homer
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Homerus
Homeros
Mæonides
Roar
Salt
Ignorance
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Billows
More quotes by Homer
Servants, when their lords no longer sway, Their minds no more to righteous courses bend.
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Now son, you don’t want to drink beer. That’s for Daddies, and kids with fake IDs.
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Singing is the lowest form of communication.
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For never, never, wicked man was wise.
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Now deep in ocean sunk the lamp of light, And drew behind the cloudy vale of night.
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The difficulty is not so great to die for a friend, as to find a friend worth dying for.
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A young man is embarrassed to question an older one.
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All strangers and beggars are from Zeus, and a gift, though small, is precious.
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Ah how shameless – the way these mortals blame the gods. From us alone they say come all their miseries yes but they themselves with their own reckless ways compound their pains beyond their proper share.
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Everything flows and nothing stays.
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Just are the ways of heaven from Heaven proceed The woes of man: Heaven doom'd the Greeks to bleed.
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Nor can one word be chang'd but for a worse.
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The single best augury is to fight for one's country.
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Don't mess with the dead, boy, they have eerie powers.
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We mortals hear only the news, and know nothing at all.
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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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I would rather be tied to the soil as a serf... than be king of all these dead and destroyed.
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No season now for calm, familiar talk.
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As leaves on the trees, such is the life of man.
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You will certainly not be able to take the lead in all things yourself, for to one man a god has given deeds of war, and to another the dance, to another lyre and song, and in another wide-sounding Zeus puts a good mind.
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