“The stillest tongue can be the truest friend.”
Quote by Euripides
Book:Euripides
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“Sufficiency's enough for men of sense.”
Source: Euripides: Electra, translated by E. T. Vermeule. The Phoenician women, translated by E. Wyckoff. The Bacchae, translated by W. Arrowsmith. Chronological note on the plays of Euripides, by R. Lattimore
“The power that keeps cities of men together Is noble preservation of law.”
Source: Euripides II: Andromache, Hecuba, The Suppliant Women, Electra
Source: Euripides
“If there are none [gods], All our toil is without meaning.”
“Where there are two, one cannot be wretched, and one not.”
Source: Euripides IV: Helen, The Phoenician Women, Orestes
Source: Euripides
“The unrighteous are never really fortunate.”
Source: Euripides IV: Helen, The Phoenician Women, Orestes
“When cheated, wife or husband feels the same.”
Source: Euripides
“There seems to be some pleasure for women in sick talk of one another.”
Source: Euripides III: Orestes, Iphigenia in Aulis, Electra, The Phoenician women, The Bacchae
