Results with search term: 'homer, the odyssey'
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Quote | Author | Send |
A small rock holds back a great wave. | Homer, The Odyssey |
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A young man is embarrassed to question an older one. | Homer, The Odyssey |
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All men have need of the gods. | Homer, The Odyssey |
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All strangers and beggars are from Zeus, and a gift, though small, is precious. | Homer, The Odyssey |
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Among all men on the earth bards have a share of honor and reverence, because the muse has taught them songs and loves the race of bards. | Homer, The Odyssey |
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By their own follies they perished, the fools. | Homer, The Odyssey |
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Dreams surely are difficult, confusing, and not everything in them is brought to pass for mankind. For fleeting dreams have two gates: one is fashioned of horn and one of ivory. Those which pass through the one of sawn ivory are deceptive, bringing tiding | Homer, The Odyssey |
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Even his griefs are a joy long after to one that remembers all that he wrought and endured. | Homer, The Odyssey |
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Evil deeds do not prosper; the slow man catches up with the swift. | Homer, The Odyssey |
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For rarely are sons similar to their fathers: most are worse, and a few are better than their fathers. | Homer, The Odyssey |
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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. | Homer, The Odyssey |
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It is equally wrong to speed a guest who does not want to go, and to keep one back who is eager. You ought to make welcome the present guest, and send forth the one who wishes to go. | Homer, The Odyssey |
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It is tedious to tell again tales already plainly told. | Homer, The Odyssey |
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Look now how mortals are blaming the gods, for they say that evils come from us, but in fact they themselves have woes beyond their share because of their own follies. | Homer, The Odyssey |
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May the gods grant you all things which your heart desires, and may they give you a husband and a home and gracious concord, for there is nothing greater and better than this -when a husband and wife keep a household in oneness of mind, a great woe to the | Homer, The Odyssey |
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