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A trifle is often pregnant with high importance the prudent man neglects no circumstance.
Sophocles
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Sophocles
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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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Not even old age knows how to love death.
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When ice appears out of doors, and boys seize it up while it is solid, at first they experience new pleasures. But in the end their pride will not agree to let it go, but their acquisition is not good for them if it stays in their hands. In the same way an identical desire drives lovers to act and not to act.
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Men of perverse opinion do not know the excellence of what is in their hands, till someone dash it from them.
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A short saying often contains much wisdom.
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Oh death, death, why do you never come to me thus summoned always day by day?
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It becomes one, while exempt from woes, to look to the dangers.
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Those griefs smart most which are seen to be of our own choice.
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