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Man is not constituted to take pleasure in the same things always.
Sophocles
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Sophocles
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Kolonos
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More quotes by Sophocles
A short saying often contains much wisdom.
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For most men friendship is a faithless harbor.
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What house, bloated with luxury, ever became prosperous without a woman's excellence?
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Trust dies but mistrust blossoms.
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Many are the things that man seeing must understand. Not seeing, how shall he know what lies in the hand of time to come?
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What greater ornament to a son than a father's glory, or to a father than a son's honorable conduct?
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Many are the wonders of the world, and none so wonderful as man.
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A fool cannot be an actor, though an actor may act a fool's part.
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Chance never helps those who do not help themselves.
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Foolishness is indeed the sister of wickedness.
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Look how men live, always precariously balanced between good and bad fortune.
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It is the merit of a general to impart good news, and to conceal the truth.
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Many the wonders but nothing walks stranger than man.
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Each say following another, either hastening or putting off our death--what pleasure does it bring? I count that man worthless whois cheered by empty hopes. No, a noble man must either live or die well.
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There are times when even justice brings harm with it.
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The keenest sorrow is to recognize ourselves as the sole cause of all our adversities.
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Hope has often caused the love of gain to ruin men.
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And if my present actions strike you as foolish, let's just say I've been accused of folly by a fool.
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Whoever thinks that he alone has speech, or possesses speech or mind above others, when unfolded such men are seen to be empty.
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Alas, how quickly the gratitude owed to the dead flows off, how quick to be proved a deceiver.
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