Homer Quotes

We've searched our database for all the quotes and captions related to Homer. Here they are! All 200 of them:

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Hateful to me as the gates of Hades is that man who hides one thing in his heart and speaks another.
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Homer (The Iliad)
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There are such things as ghosts. People everywhere have always known that. And we believe in them every bit as much as Homer did. Only now, we call them by different names. Memory. The unconscious.
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Donna Tartt (The Secret History)
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Of all creatures that breathe and move upon the earth, nothing is bred that is weaker than man.
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Homer (The Odyssey)
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โ€ฆThere is the heat of Love, the pulsing rush of Longing, the loverโ€™s whisper, irresistibleโ€”magic to make the sanest man go mad.
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Homer (The Iliad)
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There is nothing more admirable than when two people who see eye to eye keep house as man and wife, confounding their enemies and delighting their friends.
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Homer (The Odyssey)
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A man who has been through bitter experiences and travelled far enjoys even his sufferings after a time
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Homer (The Odyssey)
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Let me not then die ingloriously and without a struggle, but let me first do some great thing that shall be told among men hereafter.
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Homer (The Iliad)
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There is truth in stories,โ€ said Arthur. โ€œThere is truth in one of your paintings, boy or in a sunset or a couplet from Homer. Fiction is truth, even if it is not a fact. If you believe only in facts and forget stories, your brain will live, but your heart will die.
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Cassandra Clare (Lord of Shadows (The Dark Artifices, #2))
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There is a time for many words, and there is also a time for sleep.
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Homer (The Odyssey)
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How prone to doubt, how cautious are the wise!
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Homer
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Be strong, saith my heart; I am a soldier; I have seen worse sights than this.
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Homer (The Odyssey)
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For a friend with an understanding heart is worth no less than a brother
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Homer (The Odyssey)
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To alcohol! The cause of... and solution to... all of life's problems
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Matt Groening
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Sing, O muse, of the rage of Achilles, son of Peleus, that brought countless ills upon the Achaeans.
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Homer (The Iliad)
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...like that star of the waning summer who beyond all stars rises bathed in the ocean stream to glitter in brilliance.
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Homer (The Iliad)
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Even a fool learns something once it hits him.
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Homer (Iliad)
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Ah how shameless โ€“ 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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Homer (The Odyssey)
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We men are wretched things.
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Homer (The Iliad)
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No one can hurry me down to Hades before my time, but if a man's hour is come, be he brave or be he coward, there is no escape for him when he has once been born.
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Homer (The Iliad)
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Men are so quick to blame the gods: they say that we devise their misery. But they themselves- in their depravity- design grief greater than the griefs that fate assigns.
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Homer (The Odyssey)
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Why so much grief for me? No man will hurl me down to Death, against my fate. And fate? No one alive has ever escaped it, neither brave man nor coward, I tell you - itโ€™s born with us the day that we are born.
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Homer (The Iliad)
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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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Homer
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I had discovered that learning something, no matter how complex, wasn't hard when I had a reason to want to know it.
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Homer Hickam (Rocket Boys (Coalwood #1))
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Sleep, delicious and profound, the very counterfeit of death
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Homer (The Odyssey)
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Like the generations of leaves, the lives of mortal men. Now the wind scatters the old leaves across the earth, now the living timber bursts with the new buds and spring comes round again. And so with men: as one generation comes to life, another dies away.
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Homer (The Iliad)
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You tried your best and you failed miserably. The lesson is 'never try.' Homer Simpson
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Matt Groening
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My name is Nobody.
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Homer (The Odyssey)
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The blade itself incites to deeds of violence.
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Homer (The Odyssey)
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I didn't lie! I just created fiction with my mouth!
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Homer
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I sit, with all my theories, metaphors, and equations, Shakespeare and Milton, Barthes, Du Fu, and Homer, masters of death who canโ€™t, at last, teach me how to touch my dead.
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Ocean Vuong (On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous)
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Without a sign, his sword the brave man draws, and asks no omen, but his country's cause.
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Homer (The Iliad)
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And empty words are evil.
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Homer (The Odyssey)
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As a philosopher, if I were speaking to a purely philosophic audience I should say that I ought to describe myself as an Agnostic, because I do not think that there is a conclusive argument by which one can prove that there is not a God. On the other hand, if I am to convey the right impression to the ordinary man in the street I think that I ought to say that I am an Atheist, because, when I say that I cannot prove that there is not a God, I ought to add equally that I cannot prove that there are not the Homeric gods.
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Bertrand Russell
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He came after Homer and before Gertrude Stein, a difficult interval for a poet.
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Anne Carson (Autobiography of Red)
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And overpowered by memory Both men gave way to grief. Priam wept freely For man - killing Hector, throbbing, crouching Before Achilles' feet as Achilles wept himself, Now for his father, now for Patroclus once again And their sobbing rose and fell throughout the house.
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Homer (The Iliad)
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No man or woman born, coward or brave, can shun his destiny.
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Homer (The Iliad)
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[I]t is the wine that leads me on, the wild wine that sets the wisest man to sing at the top of his lungs, laugh like a fool โ€“ it drives the man to dancing... it even tempts him to blurt out stories better never told.
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Homer (The Odyssey)
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Each man delights in the work that suits him best.
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Homer (The Odyssey)
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Be still my heart; thou hast known worse than this.
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Homer
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His descent was like nightfall.
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Homer (The Iliad)
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Yea, and if some god shall wreck me in the wine-dark deep, even so I will endureโ€ฆ For already have I suffered full much, and much have I toiled in perils of waves and war. Let this be added to the tale of those.
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Homer (The Odyssey)
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I'll tell you a secret. Something they don't teach you in your temple. The Gods envy us. They envy us because we're mortal, because any moment might be our last. Everything is more beautiful because we're doomed. You will never be lovelier than you are now. We will never be here again.
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David Benioff
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Alexander the Great slept with 'The Iliad' beneath his pillow. During the waning moon, I cradle Homerโ€™s 'Odyssey' as if it were the sweet body of a woman.
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Roman Payne (Rooftop Soliloquy)
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I didn't lie, I was writing fiction with my mouth." Homer Simpson
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Matt Groening
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Why have you come to me here, dear heart, with all these instructions? I promise you I will do everything just as you ask. But come closer. Let us give in to grief, however briefly, in each other's arms.
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Homer (The Iliad)
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Achilles glared at him and answered, "Fool, prate not to me about covenants. There can be no covenants between men and lions, wolves and lambs can never be of one mind, but hate each other out and out an through. Therefore there can be no understanding between you and me, nor may there be any covenants between us, till one or other shall fall
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Homer (The Iliad)
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There will be killing till the score is paid.
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Homer (The Odyssey)
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some things you will think of yourself,...some things God will put into your mind
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Homer (The Odyssey)
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Take courage, my heart: you have been through worse than this. Be strong, saith my heart; I am a soldier; I have seen worse sights than this.
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Homer (The Odyssey)
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You can't keep blaming yourself. Just blame yourself once, and move on." Homer Simpson
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Matt Groening
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Still, we will let all this be a thing of the past, though it hurts us, and beat down by constraint the anger that rises inside us. Now I am making an end of my anger. It does not become me, unrelentingly to rage on
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Homer (The Iliad)
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The journey is the thing.
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Homer
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Few sons are like their fathers--most are worse, few better.
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Homer (The Odyssey)
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Come, Friend, you too must die. Why moan about it so? Even Patroclus died, a far, far better man than you. And look, you see how handsome and powerful I am? The son of a great man, the mother who gave me life-- A deathless goddess. But even for me, I tell you, Death and the strong force of fate are waiting. There will come a dawn or sunset or high noon When a man will take my life in battle too-- flinging a spear perhaps Or whipping a deadly arrow off his bow.
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Homer (The Iliad)
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There are five dangerous faults which may affect a general: (1) Recklessness, which leads to destruction; (2) cowardice, which leads to capture; (3) a hasty temper, which can be provoked by insults; (4) a delicacy of honor which is sensitive to shame; (5) over-solicitude for his men, which exposes him to worry and trouble.
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Sun Tzu (The Art of War)
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Not like Homer would I write, Not like Dante if I might, Not like Shakespeare at his best, Not like Goethe or the rest, Like myself, however small, Like myself, or not at all.
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William Allingham (Blackberries)
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Ruin, eldest daughter of Zeus, she blinds us all, that fatal madnessโ€”she with those delicate feet of hers, never touching the earth, gliding over the heads of men to trap us all. She entangles one man, now another.
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Homer (The Iliad)
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There is nothing alive more agonized than man / of all that breathe and crawl across the earth.
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Homer (The Iliad)
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Beauty! Terrible Beauty! A deathless Goddess-- so she strikes our eyes!
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Homer (The Iliad)
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If you serve too many masters, you'll soon suffer.
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Homer
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After so many years even the fire of passion dies, and with it what was believed the light of the truth. Who of us is able to say now whether Hector or Achilles was right, Agamemnon or Priam, when they fought over the beauty of a woman who is now dust and ashes?
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Umberto Eco (The Name of the Rose)
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I promise I'll do anything for you, especialy if it's easy. Homer Simpson
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Matt Groening
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out of sight,out of mind
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Homer (The Odyssey)
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Be strong, saith my heart; I am a soldier; I have seen worse sights than this.
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Homer (The Iliad)
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Life is largely a matter of expectation.
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Homer
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Nay if even in the house of Hades the dead forget their dead, yet will I even there be mindful of my dear comrade.
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Homer (The Iliad)
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By hook or by crook this peril too shall be something that we remember
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Homer (The Odyssey)
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Sing in me, Muse, and through me tell the story of that man skilled in all ways of contending, the wanderer, harried for years on end
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Homer (The Odyssey)
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There is music in words, and it can be heard you know, by thinking.
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E.L. Doctorow (Homer & Langley)
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youth is quick in feeling but weak in judgement.
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Homer
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Who is more real? Homer or Ulysses? Shakespeare or Hamlet? Burroughs or Tarzan?
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Robert A. Heinlein (The Number of the Beast)
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Is he not sacred, even to the gods, the wandering man who comes in weariness?
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Homer (The Iliad)
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Here, therefore, huge and mighty warrior though you be, here shall you die.
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Homer (Iliad)
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He knew how to say many false things that were like true sayings.
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Homer
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Why cover the same ground again? ... It goes against my grain to repeat a tale told once, and told so clearly.
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Homer (The Odyssey)
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The roaring seas and many a dark range of mountains lie between us.
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Homer (The Iliad)
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Immortals are never alien to one another.
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Homer (The Odyssey)
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Now from his breast into the eyes the ache of longing mounted, and he wept at last, his dear wife, clear and faithful, in his arms, longed for as the sunwarmed earth is longed for by a swimmer spent in rough water where his ship went down under Poseidon's blows, gale winds and tons of sea. Few men can keep alive through a big serf to crawl, clotted with brine, on kindly beaches in joy, in joy, knowing the abyss behind: and so she too rejoiced, her gaze upon her husband, her white arms round him pressed as though forever.
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Homer (The Odyssey)
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Say not a word in death's favor; I would rather be a paid servant in a poor man's house and be above ground than king of kings among the dead." -Achilles
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Homer (The Odyssey)
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I know not what the future holds, but I know who holds the future.
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Homer
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Even his griefs are a joy long after to one that remembers all that he wrought and endured.
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Homer (The Odyssey)
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They say Alexander the Great slept with 'The Iliad' beneath his pillow. Though I have never led an army, I am a wanderer. During the waning moon, I cradle Homerโ€™s 'Odyssey' as if it were the sweet body of a woman.
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Roman Payne (Rooftop Soliloquy)
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If Bacchus ever had a color he could claim for his own, it should surely be the shade of tannin on drunken lips, of John Keat's 'purple-stained mouth', or perhaps even of Homer's dangerously wine-dark sea.
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Victoria Finlay
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I also became a poet, and for one year lived in a Paradise of my own creation; I imagined that I also might obtain a niche in the temple where the names of Homer and Shakespeare are consecrated.
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Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley (Frankenstein)
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Choose well.
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Homer
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Read a verse of Homer and you can walk the walls of Troy alongside Hector; fall into a paragraph by Fitzgerald and your Now entangles with Gatsbyโ€™s Now; open a 1953 book by Ray Bradbury and go hunting T. rexes. Ursula Le Guin said: โ€œStory is our only boat for sailing on the river of time,โ€ and sheโ€™s right, of course. The shelves of every library in the world brim with time machines. Step into one, and off you go.
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Anthony Doerr
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Rage - Goddess, sing the rage of Peleus' son Achilles, murderous, doomed, that cost the Achaeans countless losses, hurling down to the House of Death so many sturdy souls, great fighters' souls, but made their bodies carrion, feasts for the dogs and birds, and the will of Zeus was moving toward its end. Begin, Muse, when the two first broke and clashed, Agamemnon lord of men and brilliant Achilles.
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Homer (The Iliad / The Odyssey)
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Wine can of their wits the wise beguile, Make the sage frolic, and the serious smile
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Homer
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My philosophy when it came to pets was much like that of having children: You got what you got, and you loved them unconditionally regardless of whatever their personalities or flaws turned out to be.
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Gwen Cooper (Homer's Odyssey)
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I'm normally not a praying man, but if you're up there, please save me, Superman. Homer Simpson
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Matt Groening
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Too many kings can ruin an army
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Homer
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down from his brow she ran his curls like thick hyacinth clusters full of blooms
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Homer (The Odyssey (Vintage classics))
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This doesn't happen in America! Maybe Ohio, but not in America!" Homer Simpson
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Matt Groening
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A last requestโ€”grant it, please. Never bury my bones apart from yours, Achilles, let them lie together . . . just as we grew up together in your house
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Homer (The Iliad)
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โ€ฆbut there they lay, sprawled across the field, craved far more by the vultures than by wives.
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Homer (The Iliad)
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To Homer, libraries were holy places like churches, and the priestly librarians a blessed race, a saving remnant in a world of sin. Whenever God grew impatient and decided to destroy the world he remembered the librarians and stayed his hand.
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Jane Langton
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Reading list (1972 edition)[edit] 1. Homer โ€“ Iliad, Odyssey 2. The Old Testament 3. Aeschylus โ€“ Tragedies 4. Sophocles โ€“ Tragedies 5. Herodotus โ€“ Histories 6. Euripides โ€“ Tragedies 7. Thucydides โ€“ History of the Peloponnesian War 8. Hippocrates โ€“ Medical Writings 9. Aristophanes โ€“ Comedies 10. Plato โ€“ Dialogues 11. Aristotle โ€“ Works 12. Epicurus โ€“ Letter to Herodotus; Letter to Menoecus 13. Euclid โ€“ Elements 14. Archimedes โ€“ Works 15. Apollonius of Perga โ€“ Conic Sections 16. Cicero โ€“ Works 17. Lucretius โ€“ On the Nature of Things 18. Virgil โ€“ Works 19. Horace โ€“ Works 20. Livy โ€“ History of Rome 21. Ovid โ€“ Works 22. Plutarch โ€“ Parallel Lives; Moralia 23. Tacitus โ€“ Histories; Annals; Agricola Germania 24. Nicomachus of Gerasa โ€“ Introduction to Arithmetic 25. Epictetus โ€“ Discourses; Encheiridion 26. Ptolemy โ€“ Almagest 27. Lucian โ€“ Works 28. Marcus Aurelius โ€“ Meditations 29. Galen โ€“ On the Natural Faculties 30. The New Testament 31. Plotinus โ€“ The Enneads 32. St. Augustine โ€“ On the Teacher; Confessions; City of God; On Christian Doctrine 33. The Song of Roland 34. The Nibelungenlied 35. The Saga of Burnt Njรกl 36. St. Thomas Aquinas โ€“ Summa Theologica 37. Dante Alighieri โ€“ The Divine Comedy;The New Life; On Monarchy 38. Geoffrey Chaucer โ€“ Troilus and Criseyde; The Canterbury Tales 39. Leonardo da Vinci โ€“ Notebooks 40. Niccolรฒ Machiavelli โ€“ The Prince; Discourses on the First Ten Books of Livy 41. Desiderius Erasmus โ€“ The Praise of Folly 42. Nicolaus Copernicus โ€“ On the Revolutions of the Heavenly Spheres 43. Thomas More โ€“ Utopia 44. Martin Luther โ€“ Table Talk; Three Treatises 45. Franรงois Rabelais โ€“ Gargantua and Pantagruel 46. John Calvin โ€“ Institutes of the Christian Religion 47. Michel de Montaigne โ€“ Essays 48. William Gilbert โ€“ On the Loadstone and Magnetic Bodies 49. Miguel de Cervantes โ€“ Don Quixote 50. Edmund Spenser โ€“ Prothalamion; The Faerie Queene 51. Francis Bacon โ€“ Essays; Advancement of Learning; Novum Organum, New Atlantis 52. William Shakespeare โ€“ Poetry and Plays 53. Galileo Galilei โ€“ Starry Messenger; Dialogues Concerning Two New Sciences 54. Johannes Kepler โ€“ Epitome of Copernican Astronomy; Concerning the Harmonies of the World 55. William Harvey โ€“ On the Motion of the Heart and Blood in Animals; On the Circulation of the Blood; On the Generation of Animals 56. Thomas Hobbes โ€“ Leviathan 57. Renรฉ Descartes โ€“ Rules for the Direction of the Mind; Discourse on the Method; Geometry; Meditations on First Philosophy 58. John Milton โ€“ Works 59. Moliรจre โ€“ Comedies 60. Blaise Pascal โ€“ The Provincial Letters; Pensees; Scientific Treatises 61. Christiaan Huygens โ€“ Treatise on Light 62. Benedict de Spinoza โ€“ Ethics 63. John Locke โ€“ Letter Concerning Toleration; Of Civil Government; Essay Concerning Human Understanding;Thoughts Concerning Education 64. Jean Baptiste Racine โ€“ Tragedies 65. Isaac Newton โ€“ Mathematical Principles of Natural Philosophy; Optics 66. Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz โ€“ Discourse on Metaphysics; New Essays Concerning Human Understanding;Monadology 67. Daniel Defoe โ€“ Robinson Crusoe 68. Jonathan Swift โ€“ A Tale of a Tub; Journal to Stella; Gulliver's Travels; A Modest Proposal 69. William Congreve โ€“ The Way of the World 70. George Berkeley โ€“ Principles of Human Knowledge 71. Alexander Pope โ€“ Essay on Criticism; Rape of the Lock; Essay on Man 72. Charles de Secondat, baron de Montesquieu โ€“ Persian Letters; Spirit of Laws 73. Voltaire โ€“ Letters on the English; Candide; Philosophical Dictionary 74. Henry Fielding โ€“ Joseph Andrews; Tom Jones 75. Samuel Johnson โ€“ The Vanity of Human Wishes; Dictionary; Rasselas; The Lives of the Poets
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Mortimer J. Adler (How to Read a Book: The Classic Guide to Intelligent Reading)
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Aries in his many fits knows no favorites.
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Homer (The Odyssey)
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A small rock holds back a great wave.
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Homer
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The sort of words a man says is the sort he hears in return.
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Homer (The Iliad)
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Everything is more beautiful because we are doomed. You will never be lovelier than you are now. We will never be here again.
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Homer (The Iliad)
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Reading the very best writersโ€”let us say Homer, Dante, Shakespeare, Tolstoyโ€”is not going to make us better citizens. Art is perfectly useless, according to the sublime Oscar Wilde, who was right about everything. He also told us that all bad poetry is sincere. Had I the power to do so, I would command that these words be engraved above every gate at every university, so that each student might ponder the splendor of the insight.
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Harold Bloom (The Western Canon: The Books and School of the Ages)
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I detest that man, who hides one thing in the depths of his heart, and speaks forth another
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Homer
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[B]ut it is only what happens, when they die, to all mortals. The sinews no longer hold the flesh and the bones together, and once the spirit has let the white bones, all the rest of the body is made subject to the fire's strong fury, but the soul flitters out like a dream and flies away.
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Homer (The Odyssey)
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This sentence is made of lead (and a sentence of lead gives a reader an entirely different sensation from one made of magnesium). This sentence is made of yak wool. This sentence is made of sunlight and plums. This sentence is made of ice. This sentence is made from the blood of the poet. This sentence was made in Japan. This sentence glows in the dark. This sentence was born with a caul. This sentence has a crush on Norman Mailer. This sentence is a wino and doesn't care who knows it. Like many italic sentences, this one has Mafia connections. This sentence is a double Cancer with a Pisces rising. This sentence lost its mind searching for the perfect paragraph. This sentence refuses to be diagrammed. This sentence ran off with an adverb clause. This sentence is 100 percent organic: it will not retain a facsimile of freshness like those sentences of Homer, Shakespeare, Goethe et al., which are loaded with preservatives. This sentence leaks. This sentence doesn't look Jewish... This sentence has accepted Jesus Christ as its personal savior. This sentence once spit in a book reviewer's eye. This sentence can do the funky chicken. This sentence has seen too much and forgotten too little. This sentence is called "Speedoo" but its real name is Mr. Earl. This sentence may be pregnant. This sentence suffered a split infinitive - and survived. If this sentence has been a snake you'd have bitten it. This sentence went to jail with Clifford Irving. This sentence went to Woodstock. And this little sentence went wee wee wee all the way home.
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Tom Robbins (Even Cowgirls Get the Blues)
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I wish that strife would vanish away from among gods and mortals, and gall, which makes a man grow angry for all his great mind, that gall of anger that swarms like smoke inside of a man's heart and becomes a thing sweeter to him by far than the dripping of honey.
โ€
โ€
Homer (The Iliad)
โ€œ
You, you insolent brazen bitchโ€”you really dare to shake that monstrous spear in Fatherโ€™s face?
โ€
โ€
Homer (The Iliad)
โ€œ
ฯ„ฮญฯ„ฮปฮฑฮธฮน ฮดฮฎ, ฮบฯฮฑฮดฮฏฮท: ฮบฮฑแฝถ ฮบฯฮฝฯ„ฮตฯฮฟฮฝ แผ„ฮปฮปฮฟ ฯ€ฮฟฯ„แพฝ แผ”ฯ„ฮปฮทฯ‚. - Be patient, my heart: for you have endured things worse than this before.
โ€
โ€
Homer (The Odyssey)
โ€œ
Three thousand years have not changed the human condition in this respect; we are still lovers and victims of the will to violence, and so long as we are, Homer will be read as its truest interpreter.
โ€
โ€
Homer (The Iliad)
โ€œ
Fear, O Achilles, the wrath of heaven; think on your own father and have compassion upon me, who am the more pitiable
โ€
โ€
Homer (The Iliad)
โ€œ
It behooves a father to be blameless if he expects his child to be.
โ€
โ€
Homer
โ€œ
Come then, put away your sword in its sheath, and let us two go up into my bed so that, lying together in the bed of love, we may then have faith and trust in each other.
โ€
โ€
Homer (The Odyssey)
โ€œ
ย  โ€œNo, Iโ€™m in the supplementary reserve,โ€ Homer pointed out. โ€œAs in supplementary to the actual reserve. As in, never call me. Ever.
โ€
โ€
D. Rebbitt (Revelation: The Globur Incursion Book 10)
โ€œ
O Divine Poesy, goddess, daughter of Zeus, sustain for me this song of the various-minded man who, after he had plundered the innermost citadel of hallowed Troy, was made to stay grievously about the coasts of men, the sport of their customs, good and bad, while his heart, through all the sea-faring, ached with an agony to redeem himself and bring his company safe home. Vain hope โ€“ for them. The fools! Their own witlessness cast them aside. To destroy for meat the oxen of the most exalted Sun, wherefore the Sun-god blotted out the day of their return. Make this tale live for us in all its many bearings, O Muse.โ€ โ€“ from Homerโ€™s Odyssey, translation by T.E. Lawrence (Lawrence of Arabia)
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โ€
Steven Pressfield (The War of Art)
โ€œ
And fate? No one alive has ever escaped it, neither brave man nor coward, I tell youโ€” itโ€™s born with us the day that we are born.
โ€
โ€
Homer (The Iliad)
โ€œ
Think not to match yourself against the gods, for men that walk the earth cannot hold their own with the immortals.
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โ€
Homer (Iliad)
โ€œ
They are so caught up in their happiness that they don't realize I'm not really a part of it. I am wandering along the periphery. I am like the people in the Winslow Homer paintings, sharing the same room with them but not really there. I am like the fish in the aquarium, thinking in a different language, adapting to a life that's not my natural habitat. I am the people in the other cars, each with his or her own story, but passing too quickly to be noticed or understood. . . . There are moments I just sit in my frame, float in my tank, ride in my car and say nothing, think nothing that connects me to anything at all.
โ€
โ€
David Levithan (Every Day (Every Day, #1))
โ€œ
You, why are you so afraid of war and slaughter? Even if all the rest of us drop and die around you, grappling for the ships, youโ€™d run no risk of death: you lack the heart to last it out in combatโ€”coward!
โ€
โ€
Homer (The Iliad)
โ€œ
but sing no more this bitter tale that wears my heart away
โ€
โ€
Homer (The Odyssey)
โ€œ
Antilochus! You're the most appalling driver in the world! Go to hell!
โ€
โ€
Homer (The Iliad)
โ€œ
Always be the best, my boy, the bravest, and hold your head up high above all the others. Never disgrace the generation of your fathers. They were the bravest champions...
โ€
โ€
Homer
โ€œ
Wake up, buddy. You okay?โ€ โ€œAuntie Em! Auntie Em!โ€ Homerโ€™s VR came online, smiling. โ€œI guess we gotโ€™em.โ€ I snorted with relief. โ€œAnd their little dog, too.โ€ Homer steepled his fingers in a properly evil mastermindish pose. โ€œAll their base are belong to us.
โ€
โ€
Dennis E. Taylor (We Are Legion (We Are Bob) (Bobiverse, #1))
โ€œ
What are the children of men, but as leaves that drop at the wind's breath?
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โ€
Homer (The Iliad)
โ€œ
Even a fool may be wise after the event.
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โ€
Homer (The Iliad)
โ€œ
You've injured me, Farshooter, most deadly of the gods; And I'd punish you, if I had the power.
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โ€
Homer (The Iliad)
โ€œ
Everything since Homer has improved, except poetry.
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โ€
Giacomo Leopardi
โ€œ
Tell me, Muse, of the man of many ways, who was driven far journeys
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โ€
Homer (The Odyssey)
โ€œ
There is no greater fame for a man than that which he wins with his footwork or the skill of his hands.
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โ€
Homer (The Odyssey)
โ€œ
I believe . . . that the petal of a flower or a tiny worm on the path says far more, contains far more than all the books in the library. One cannot say very much with mere letters and words. Sometimes I'll be writing a Greek letter, a theta or an omega, and tilt my pen just the slightest bit; suddenly the letter has a tail and becomes a fish; in a second it evokes all the streams and rivers of the world, all that is cool and humid, Homer's sea and the waters on which Saint Peter wandered; or becomes a bird, flaps its tail, shakes out its feathers, puffs itself up, laughs, flies away. You probably don't appreciate letters like that, very much, do you, Narcissus? But I say: with them God wrote the world.
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โ€
Hermann Hesse (Narcissus and Goldmund)
โ€œ
Like a girl, a baby running after her mother, begging to be picked up, and she tugs on her skirts, holding her back as she tries to hurry offโ€”all tears, fawning up at her, till she takes her in her armsโ€ฆ Thatโ€™s how you look, Patroclus, streaming live tears.
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โ€
Homer (The Iliad)
โ€œ
My every impulse bends to what is right
โ€
โ€
Homer (The Odyssey)
โ€œ
All men owe honor to the poets - honor and awe; for they are dearest to the Muse who puts upon their lips the ways of life.
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โ€
Homer
โ€œ
Concern should drive us into action and not into a depression. No man is free who cannot control himself.
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โ€
Pythagoras (The Big Book of Ancient Classics: Contains the works of Aristotle, Plato, Homer, Aeschylus... (The Greatest Collection 6))
โ€œ
These nights are endless, and a man can sleep through them, or he can enjoy listening to stories, and you have no need to go to bed before it is time. Too much sleep is only a bore. And of the others, any one whose heart and spirit urge him can go outside and sleep, and then, when the dawn shows, breakfast first, then go out to tend the swine of our master. But we two, sitting here in the shelter, eating and drinking, shall entertain each other remembering and retelling our sad sorrows. For afterwards a man who has suffered much and wandered much has pleasure out of his sorrows.
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โ€
Homer (The Odyssey)
โ€œ
Tell me, O muse, of travellers far and wide
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โ€
Homer
โ€œ
What a lamentable thing it is that men should blame the gods and regard us as the source of their troubles, when it is their own transgressions which bring them suffering that was not their destiny.
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โ€
Homer (The Odyssey)
โ€œ
Trying is the first step towards failure
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โ€
Homer Simpson
โ€œ
The proud heart feels not terror nor turns to run and it is his own courage that kills him
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โ€
Homer (The Iliad)
โ€œ
Scepticism is as much the result of knowledge, as knowledge is of scepticism.
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โ€
Homer (The Odyssey)
โ€œ
All Iโ€™ve done is give you a book,โ€ she said. โ€œYou have to have the courage to learn whatโ€™s inside it.
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โ€
Homer Hickam (Rocket Boys (The Coalwood Series #1))
โ€œ
Men grow tired of sleep, love, singing and dancing, sooner than war.
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โ€
Homer
โ€œ
My life is more to me than all the wealth of Ilius
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โ€
Homer (The Iliad)
โ€œ
Heaven has appointed us dwellers on earth a time for all things.
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โ€
Homer (The Odyssey)
โ€œ
Any moment might be our last. Everything is more beautiful because we're doomed. You will never be lovelier than you are now. We will never be here again
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Homer (The Iliad)
โ€œ
The rose Dawn might have found them weeping still had not grey-eyed Athena slowed the night when night was most profound, and held the Dawn under the Ocean of the East. That glossy team, Firebright and Daybright, the Dawn's horses that draw her heavenward for men- Athena stayed their harnessing.
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โ€
Homer (The Odyssey)
โ€œ
I have no interest at all in food and drink, but only in slaughter and blood and the agonized groans of mangled men
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โ€
Homer
โ€œ
...of all creatures that breathe and move on earth none is more to be pitied than a man.
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โ€
Homer (The Iliad)
โ€œ
It is entirely seemly for a young man killed in battle to lie mangled by the bronze spear. In his death all things appear fair.
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โ€
Homer (The Iliad)
โ€œ
But baseball was different. Schwartz thought of it as Homeric - not a scrum but a series of isolated contests. Batter versus pitcher, fielder versus ball. You couldn't storm around, snorting and slapping people, the way Schwartz did while playing football.You stood and waited and tried to still your mind. When your moment came, you had to be ready, because if you fucked up, everyone would know whose fault it was. What other sport not only kept a stat as cruel as the error but posted it on the scoreboard for everyone to see?
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โ€
Chad Harbach (The Art of Fielding)
โ€œ
Be still, my heart; thou hast known worse than this. On that day when the cyclops, unrestrained in fury, devoured the mighty men of my of my company; but still thou didst endure till thy craft found a way for thee forth from out the cave, where thou thoughtest to die.
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โ€
Homer (The Odyssey (Marvel Illustrated))
โ€œ
Not much comes easy in this world, Sonny. If it does, it's best to be suspicious of it. It's probably not worth much.
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โ€
Homer Hickam (Rocket Boys (Coalwood #1))
โ€œ
But listen to me first and swear an oath to use all your eloquence and strength to look after me and protect me.
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โ€
Homer (The Iliad)
โ€œ
Strife and Confusion joined the fight, along with cruel Death, who seized one wounded man while still alive and then another man without a wound, while pulling the feet of one more corpse out from the fight. The clothes Death wore around her shoulders were dyed red with human blood.
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โ€
Homer (The Iliad)
โ€œ
Of the many things hidden from the knowledge of man, nothing is more unintelligible than the human heart.
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โ€
Homer (The Odyssey)
โ€œ
The charity that is a trifle to us can be precious to others.
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โ€
Homer
โ€œ
I say no wealth is worth my life.
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โ€
Homer (The Iliad)
โ€œ
Question me now about all other matters, but do not ask who I am, for fear you may increase in my heart it's burden of sorrow as I think back; I am very full of grief, and I should not sit in the house of somebody else with my lamentation and wailing. It is not good to go on mourning forever.
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โ€
Homer
โ€œ
For they imagined as they wished--that it was a wild shot,/ an unintended killing--fools, not to comprehend/ they were already in the grip of death./ But glaring under his brows Odysseus answered: 'You yellow dogs, you thought I'd never make it/ home from the land of Troy. You took my house to plunder,/ twisted my maids to serve your beds. You dared/ bid for my wife while I was still alive./ Contempt was all you had for the gods who rule wide heaven,/ contempt for what men say of you hereafter./ Your last hour has come. You die in blood.
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โ€
Homer (The Odyssey)
โ€œ
Goddess of song, teach me the story of a hero.
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โ€
Homer
โ€œ
Physical objects are conceptually imported into the situation as convenient intermediaries not by definition in terms of experience, but simply as irreducible posits comparable, epistemologically, to the gods of Homer . . . For my part I do, qua lay physicist, believe in physical objects and not in Homer's gods; and I consider it a scientific error to believe otherwise. But in point of epistemological footing, the physical objects and the gods differ only in degree and not in kind. Both sorts of entities enter our conceptions only as cultural posits.
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โ€
Willard Van Orman Quine
โ€œ
Ah my friend, if you and I could escape this fray and live forever, never a trace of age, immortal, I would never fight on the front lines again or command you to the field where men win fame.
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โ€
Homer (The Iliad)
โ€œ
Do not beg me by knees or by parents you dog! I only wish I were savagely wrathful enough to hack up your corpse and eat it raw
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โ€
Homer
โ€œ
So, the gods don't hand out all their gifts at once, not build and brains and flowing speech to all. One man may fail to impress us with his looks but a god can crown his words with beauty, charm, and men look on with delight when he speaks out. Never faltering, filled with winning self-control, he shines forth at assembly grounds and people gaze at him like a god when he walks through the streets. Another man may look like a deathless one on high but there's not a bit of grace to crown his words. Just like you, my fine, handsome friend.
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โ€
Homer (The Odyssey)
โ€œ
But as he stood watching Carthage burn, Scipio reflected on the fate of this once great power. Overcome with emotion, he cried. His friend and mentor Polybius approached and asked why Scipio was crying. "A glorious moment, Polybiius; but I have a dread foreboding that some day the same doom will be pronounced on my own country." Scipio then quoted a line from Homer: "A day will come when sacred Troy shall perish, And Priam and his people shall be slain." Scipio knew that no power endures indefinitely, that all empires must fall.
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โ€
Mike Duncan (The Storm Before the Storm: The Beginning of the End of the Roman Republic)
โ€œ
I will stay with it and endure through suffering hardship and once the heaving sea has shaken my raft to pieces, then I will swim.
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โ€
Homer
โ€œ
First she said we were to keep clear of the Sirens, who sit and sing most beautifully in a field of flowers; but she said I might hear them myself so long as no one else did. Therefore, take me and bind me to the crosspiece half way up the mast; bind me as I stand upright, with a bond so fast that I cannot possibly break away, and lash the rope's ends to the mast itself. If I beg and pray you to set me free, then bind me more tightly still.
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โ€
Homer (The Odyssey)
โ€œ
Have patience, heart.
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โ€
Homer
โ€œ
...if fifty bands of men surrounded us/ and every sword sang for your blood,/ you could make off still with their cows and sheep.
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โ€
Homer (The Odyssey)
โ€œ
I fancied my luck to be witnessing yet another full moon. True, Iโ€™d seen hundreds of full moons in my life, but they were not limitless. When one starts thinking of the full moon as a common sight that will come again to oneโ€™s eyes ad-infinitum, the value of life is diminished and life goes by uncherished. โ€˜This may be my last moon,โ€™ I sighed, feeling a sudden sweep of sorrow; and went back to reading more of The Odyssey.
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โ€
Roman Payne
โ€œ
It will be hard James but you come from sturdy peasant stock men who picked cotton and dammed rivers and built railroads and in the teeth of the most terrifying odds achieved an unassailable and monumental dignity You come from a long line of great poets some of the greatest poets since Homer. One of them said "The very time I thought I was lost My dungeon shook and my chains fell off." You know and I know that the country is celebrating one hundred years of freedom one hundred years too soon. We cannot be free until they are free. God bless you James and Godspeed.
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โ€
James Baldwin (The Fire Next Time (Vintage International))
โ€œ
Reproach is infinite, and knows no end So voluble a weapon is the tongue; Wounded, we wound; and neither side can fail For every man has equal strength to rail.
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โ€
Homer
โ€œ
A multitude of rulers is not a good thing. Let there be one ruler, one king.
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โ€
Homer (The Iliad)
โ€œ
So I didn't adopt Homer because he was cute and little and sweet, or because he was helpless and needed me. I adopted him because when you think you see something so fundamentally worthwhile in someone else, you don't look for the reasons - like bad timing or a negative bank balance - that might keep it out of your life. You commit to being strong enough to build your life around it, no matter what. In doing so, you begin to become the thing you admire.
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โ€
Gwen Cooper (Homer's Odyssey)
โ€œ
Why does Homer give us descriptions so much more vivid than all the poets. Because he sees so much more around him. We speak about poetry so abstractly because we all tend to be poor poets. The aesthetic phenomenon is fundamentally simple: if someone simply possesses the capacity to see a living game going on continually and to live all the time surrounded by hordes of ghosts, then the man is a poet; if someone simply feels the urge to change himself and to speak out from other bodies and souls, then that person is a dramatist.
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โ€
Friedrich Nietzsche (The Birth of Tragedy)
โ€œ
...he'll never lie - the man is far too wise.
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โ€
Homer (The Odyssey)
โ€œ
When night falls and the world lies lost in sleep, I take to my bed, my heart throbbing, about to break, anxieties swarming, piercingโ€”I may go mad with grief.
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โ€
Homer (The Odyssey)
โ€œ
...an irresistible sleep fell deeply on his eyes, the sweetest, soundest oblivion, still as the sleep of death itself...
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โ€
Homer (The Odyssey)
โ€œ
You must endure and not be broken-hearted.
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โ€
Homer (The Iliad)
โ€œ
I say no wealth is worth my life! Not all they claim was stored in the depths of Troy, that city built on riches, in the old days of peace before the sons of Achaea came- not all the gold held fast in the Archer's rocky vaults, in Phoebus Apollo's house on Pytho's sheer cliffs! Cattle and fat sheep can all be had for the raiding, tripods all for the trading, and tawny-headed stallions. But a man's life breath cannot come back again- no raiders in force, no trading brings it back, once it slips through a man's clenched teeth. Mother tells me, the immortal goddess Thetis with her glistening feet, that two fates bear me on to the day of death. If I hold out here and I lay siege to Troy, my journey home is gone, but my glory never dies. If I voyage back to the fatherland I love, my pride, my glory dies... true, but the life that's left me will be long, the stroke of death will not come on me quickly.
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โ€
Homer (The Iliad)
โ€œ
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 tidings which come to nought, but those which issue from the one of polished horn bring true results when a mortal sees them.
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โ€
Homer
โ€œ
Scepticism is as much the result of knowledge, as knowledge is of scepticism. To be content with what we at present know, is, for the most part, to shut our ears against conviction; since, from the very gradual character of our education, we must continually forget, and emancipate ourselves from, knowledge previously acquired; we must set aside old notions and embrace fresh ones; and, as we learn, we must be daily unlearning something which it has cost us no small labour and anxiety to acquire.
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โ€
Homer (The Iliad)
โ€œ
The gods weave misfortunes for men, so that the generations to come will have something to sing about.โ€ Mallarmรฉ repeats, less beautifully, what Homer said; โ€œtout aboutit en un livre,โ€ everything ends up in a book. The Greeks speak of generations that will sing; Mallarmรฉ speaks of an object, of a thing among things, a book. But the idea is the same; the idea that we are made for art, we are made for memory, we are made for poetry, or perhaps we are made for oblivion. But something remains, and that something is history or poetry, which are not essentially different.
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โ€
Jorge Luis Borges (Seven Nights)
โ€œ
And what if one of the gods does wreck me out on the wine-dark sea? I have a heart that is inured to suffering and I shall steel it to endure that too. For in my day I have had many bitter and painful experiences in war and on the stormy seas. So let this new disaster come. It only makes one more.
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โ€
Homer (The Odyssey)
โ€œ
I love the writers of my thousand books. It pleases me to think how astonished old Homer, whoever he was, would be to find his epics on the shelf of such an unimaginable being as myself, in the middle of an unrumored continent. I love the large minority of the writers on my shelves who have struggled with words and thoughts and, by my lights, have lost the struggle. All together they are my community, the creators of the very idea of books, poetry, and extended narratives, and of the amazing human conversation that has taken place across the millennia, through weal and woe, over the heads of interest and utility.
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โ€
Marilynne Robinson (When I Was a Child I Read Books)
โ€œ
Let him submit to me! Only the god of death is so relentless, Death submits to no oneโ€”so mortals hate him most of all the gods. Let him bow down to me! I am the greater king, I am the elder-born, I claimโ€”the greater man.
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โ€
Homer (The Iliad)
โ€œ
I am encouraged as I look at some of those who have listened to their "different drum": Einstein was hopeless at school math and commented wryly on his inadequacy in human relations. Winston Churchill was an abysmal failure in his early school years. Byron, that revolutionary student, had to compensate for a club foot; Demosthenes for a stutter; and Homer was blind. Socrates couldn't manage his wife, and infuriated his countrymen. And what about Jesus, if we need an ultimate example of failure with one's peers? Or an ultimate example of love?
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โ€
Madeleine L'Engle (A Circle of Quiet (Crosswicks Journals, #1))
โ€œ
Come, weave us a scheme so I can pay them back! Stand beside me, Athena, fire me with daring, fierce as the day we ripped Troy's glittering crown of towers down. Stand by me - furious now as then, my bright-eyed one - and I would fight three hundred men, great goddess, with you to brace me, comrade-in-arms in battle!
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โ€
Homer (The Odyssey)
โ€œ
What Pascal overlooked was the hair-raising possibility that God might out-Luther Luther. A special area in hell might be reserved for those who go to mass. Or God might punish those whose faith is prompted by prudence. Perhaps God prefers the abstinent to those who whore around with some denomination he despises. Perhaps he reserves special rewards for those who deny themselves the comfort of belief. Perhaps the intellectual ascetic will win all while those who compromised their intellectual integrity lose everything. There are many other possibilities. There might be many gods, including one who favors people like Pascal; but the other gods might overpower or outvote him, ร  la Homer. Nietzsche might well have applied to Pascal his cutting remark about Kant: when he wagered on God, the great mathematician 'became an idiot.
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โ€
Walter Kaufmann (Critique of Religion and Philosophy)
โ€œ
Why do you suppose the poets talk about hearts?' he asked me suddenly. 'When they discuss emotional damage? The tissue of hearts is tough as a shoe. Did you ever sew up a heart?' I shook my head. 'No, but I've watched. I know what you mean.' The walls of a heart are thick and strong, and the surgeons use heavy needles. It takes a good bit of strength, but it pulls together neatly. As much as anything it's like binding a book. The seat of human emotion should be the liver,' Doc Homer said. 'That would be an appropriate metaphor: we don't hold love in our hearts, we hold it in our livers.' I understood exactly. Once in ER I saw a woman who'd been stabbed everywhere, most severely in the liver. It's an organ with the consistency of layer upon layer of wet Kleenex. Every attempt at repair just opens new holes that tear and bleed. You try to close the wound with fresh wounds, and you try and you try and you don't give up until there's nothing left.
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โ€
Barbara Kingsolver
โ€œ
Huxley: "Tell me something Bryce, do you know the difference between a Jersey, a Guernsey, a Holstein, and an Ayershire?" Bryce: "No." Huxley: "Seabags Brown does." Bryce: "I don't see what that has to do..." Huxley: "What do you know about Gaelic history?" Bryce: "Not much." Huxley: "Then why don't you sit down one day with Gunner McQuade. He is an expert. Speaks the language, too." Bryce: "I don't..." Huxley: " What do you know about astronomy?" Bryce: "A little." Huxley: "Discuss it with Wellman, he held a fellowship." Bryce: "This is most puzzling." Huxley: "What about Homer, ever read Homer?" Bryce: "Of course I've read Homer." Huxley: "In the original Greek?" Bryce: "No" Huxley: "Then chat with Pfc. Hodgkiss. Loves to read the ancient Greek." Bryce: "Would you kindly get to the point?" Huxley: "The point is this, Bryce. What makes you think you are so goddam superior? Who gave you the bright idea that you had a corner on the world's knowledge? There are privates in this battalion who can piss more brains down a slit trench then you'll ever have. You're the most pretentious, egotistical individual I've ever encountered. Your superiority complex reeks. I've seen the way you treat men, like a big strutting peacock. Why, you've had them do everything but wipe your ass.
โ€
โ€
Leon Uris (Battle Cry)
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-You've got a . . . Lot of books, he said at last. -it's a sickness. -Are you . . . Seeing anyone for it? -I'm afraid it's untreatable. -is this the . . . Dewey decimal system? -No. But it's based on similar principles. Those are the British novelists. The French are in the kitchen. Homer, Virgil, and the other epics are by the tub. -I take it the . . . Transcendental its do better in the sunlight. -Exactly. -Do they need much water? -Not as much as you think. But lots of pruning. He pointed the volume toward a pile of books under my bed. -And the . . . Mushrooms? -The Russians. -Ah. -Who's winning? -Not me.
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Amor Towles (Rules of Civility)
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Although it is uncomfortable to admit it, and many scientists especially try to brush it under the carpet, each of us is a bundle of rational and irrational impulses, and the attempt to divorce the two is doomed to failure...In this sense the Presocratic combination of vision and logic is a precise model for two strands of future development in human intellectual endeavor, which should not perhaps have been allowed to separate from each other as far as they sometimes have. Or rather, the attempt to separate them is ultimately unreal, a violation which leads to abominations such as the rape of the planet and the dehumanizing loss of imagination...As Homer well knew, the gods in some disguise or other never die.
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Robin Waterfield
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And so their spirits soared as they took positions own the passageways of battle all night long, and the watchfires blazed among them. Hundreds strong, as stars in the night sky glittering round the moon's brilliance blaze in all their glory when the air falls to a sudden, windless calm... all the lookout peaks stand out and the jutting cliffs and the steep ravines and down from the high heavens bursts the boundless bright air and all the stars shine clear and the shepherd's heart exults - so many fires burned between the ships and the Xanthus' whirling rapids set by the men of Troy, bright against their walls. A thousand fires were burning there on the plain and beside each fire sat fifty fighting men poised in the leaping blaze, and champing oats and glistening barley, stationed by their chariots, stallions waited for Dawn to mount her glowing throne.
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Homer (The Iliad)
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When I walk into [the studio] I am alone, but I am alone with my body, ambition, ideas, passions, needs, memories, goals, prejudices, distractions, fears. These ten items are at the heart of who I am. Whatever I am going to create will be a reflection of how these have shaped my life, and how I've learned to channel my experiences into them. The last two -- distractions and fears -- are the dangerous ones. They're the habitual demons that invade the launch of any project. No one starts a creative endeavor without a certain amount of fear; the key is to learn how to keep free-floating fears from paralyzing you before you've begun. When I feel that sense of dread, I try to make it as specific as possible. Let me tell you my five big fears: 1. People will laugh at me. 2. Someone has done it before. 3. I have nothing to say. 4. I will upset someone I love. 5. Once executed, the idea will never be as good as it is in my mind. "There are mighty demons, but they're hardly unique to me. You probably share some. If I let them, they'll shut down my impulses ('No, you can't do that') and perhaps turn off the spigots of creativity altogether. So I combat my fears with a staring-down ritual, like a boxer looking his opponent right in the eye before a bout. 1. People will laugh at me? Not the people I respect; they haven't yet, and they're not going to start now.... 2. Someone has done it before? Honey, it's all been done before. Nothing's original. Not Homer or Shakespeare and certainly not you. Get over yourself. 3. I have nothing to say? An irrelevant fear. We all have something to say. 4. I will upset someone I love? A serious worry that is not easily exorcised or stared down because you never know how loved ones will respond to your creation. The best you can do is remind yourself that you're a good person with good intentions. You're trying to create unity, not discord. 5. Once executed, the idea will never be as good as it is in my mind? Toughen up. Leon Battista Alberti, the 15th century architectural theorist, said, 'Errors accumulate in the sketch and compound in the model.' But better an imperfect dome in Florence than cathedrals in the clouds.
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Twyla Tharp (The Creative Habit: Learn It and Use It for Life)
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Homer, in the second book of the Iliad says with fine enthusiasm, "Give me masturbation or give me death." Caesar, in his Commentaries, says, "To the lonely it is company; to the forsaken it is a friend; to the aged and to the impotent it is a benefactor. They that are penniless are yet rich, in that they still have this majestic diversion." In another place this experienced observer has said, "There are times when I prefer it to sodomy." Robinson Crusoe says, "I cannot describe what I owe to this gentle art." Queen Elizabeth said, "It is the bulwark of virginity." Cetewayo, the Zulu hero, remarked, "A jerk in the hand is worth two in the bush." The immortal Franklin has said, "Masturbation is the best policy." Michelangelo and all of the other old masters--"old masters," I will remark, is an abbreviation, a contraction--have used similar language. Michelangelo said to Pope Julius II, "Self-negation is noble, self-culture beneficent, self-possession is manly, but to the truly great and inspiring soul they are poor and tame compared with self-abuse." Mr. Brown, here, in one of his latest and most graceful poems, refers to it in an eloquent line which is destined to live to the end of time--"None knows it but to love it; none name it but to praise.
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Mark Twain (On Masturbation)
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It is always as it was between Achilles and Homer: one person has the experience, the sensation, the other describes it. A real writer only gives words to the affects and experiences of others; he is an artist in divining a great deal from the little that he has felt. Artist are by no means people of great passion, but they frequently present themselves as such, unconsciously sensing that others give greater credence to the passions they portray if the artist's own life testifies to his experience in this area. We need only let ourselves go, not control ourselves, give free play to our wrath or our desire, and the whole world immediately cries: how passionate he is! But there really is something significant in a deeply gnawing passion that consumes and often swallows up an individual: whoever experiences this surely does not describe it in dramas, music, or novels. Artists are frequently unbridled individuals, insofar, that is, as they are not artists: but that is something different.
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Friedrich Nietzsche (Human, All Too Human: A Book for Free Spirits)
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I wanted it so much. So much sometimes it felt like I couldn't breathe. Sometimes I would cry, not because I was sad, but because it hurt, physical pain from the intensity of wanting something so much. I'm a good student of philosophy, I know my Stoics, Cynics, their advice, that, when a desire is so intense it hurts you, the healthy path is to detach, unwant it, let it go. The healthy thing for the self. But there are a lot of reasons one can want to be an author: acclaim, wealth, self-respect, finding a community, the finite immortality of name in print, so many more. But I wanted it to add my voice to the Great Conversation, to reply to Diderot, Voltaire, Osamu Tezuka, and Alfred Bester, so people would read my books and think new things, and make new things from those thoughts, my little contribution to the path which flows from Gilgamesh and Homer to the stars. And that isn't just for me. It's for you. Which means it was the right choice to hang on to the desire, even when it hurt so much.
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Ada Palmer (Too Like the Lightning (Terra Ignota, #1))
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Here there comes a practical question which has often troubled me. Whenever I go into a foreign country or a prison or any similar place they always ask me what is my religion. I never know whether I should say "Agnostic" or whether I should say "Atheist". It is a very difficult question and I daresay that some of you have been troubled by it. As a philosopher, if I were speaking to a purely philosophic audience I should say that I ought to describe myself as an Agnostic, because I do not think that there is a conclusive argument by which one prove that there is not a God. On the other hand, if I am to convey the right impression to the ordinary man in the street I think I ought to say that I am an Atheist, because when I say that I cannot prove that there is not a God, I ought to add equally that I cannot prove that there are not the Homeric gods. None of us would seriously consider the possibility that all the gods of homer really exist, and yet if you were to set to work to give a logical demonstration that Zeus, Hera, Poseidon, and the rest of them did not exist you would find it an awful job. You could not get such proof. Therefore, in regard to the Olympic gods, speaking to a purely philosophical audience, I would say that I am an Agnostic. But speaking popularly, I think that all of us would say in regard to those gods that we were Atheists. In regard to the Christian God, I should, I think, take exactly the same line.
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Bertrand Russell
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As they were speaking, a dog that had been lying asleep raised his head and pricked up his ears. This was Argos, whom Odysseus had bred before setting out for Troy, but he had never had any enjoyment from him. In the old days he used to be taken out by the young men when they went hunting wild goats, or deer, or hares, but now that his master was gone he was lying neglected on the heaps of mule and cow dung that lay in front of the stable doors till the men should come and draw it away to manure the great close; and he was full of fleas. As soon as he saw Odysseus standing there, he dropped his ears and wagged his tail, but he could not get close up to his master. When Odysseus saw the dog on the other side of the yard, dashed a tear from his eyes without Eumaeus seeing it, and said: 'Eumaeus, what a noble hound that is over yonder on the manure heap: his build is splendid; is he as fine a fellow as he looks, or is he only one of those dogs that come begging about a table, and are kept merely for show?' 'This dog,' answered Eumaeus, 'belonged to him who has died in a far country. If he were what he was when Odysseus left for Troy, he would soon show you what he could do. There was not a wild beast in the forest that could get away from him when he was once on its tracks. But now he has fallen on evil times, for his master is dead and gone, and the women take no care of him. Servants never do their work when their master's hand is no longer over them, for Zeus takes half the goodness out of a man when he makes a slave of him.' So saying he entered the well-built mansion, and made straight for the riotous pretenders in the hall. But Argos passed into the darkness of death, now that he had fulfilled his destiny of faith and seen his master once more after twenty yearsโ€ฆ
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Homer (The Odyssey)
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The value of Greek prose composition, he said, was not that it gave one any particular facility in the language that could not be gained as easily by other methods but that if done properly, off the top of one's head, it taught one to think in Greek. One's thought patterns become different, he said, when forced into the confines of a rigid and unfamiliar tongue. Certain common ideas become inexpressible; other, previously undreamt-of ones spring to life, finding miraculous new articulation. By necessity, I suppose, it is difficult for me to explain in English exactly what I mean. I can only say that an incendium is in its nature entirely different from the feu with which a Frenchman lights his cigarette, and both are very different from the stark, inhuman pur that the Greeks knew, the pur that roared from the towers of Ilion or leapt and screamed on that desolate, windy beach, from the funeral pyre of Patroklos. Pur: that one word contains for me the secret, the bright, terrible clarity of ancient Greek. How can I make you see it, this strange harsh light which pervades Homer's landscapes and illumines the dialogues of Plato, an alien light, inarticulable in our common tongue? Our shared language is a language of the intricate, the peculiar, the home of pumpkins and ragamuffins and bodkins and beer, the tongue of Ahab and Falstaff and Mrs. Gamp; and while I find it entirely suitable for reflections such as these, it fails me utterly when I attempt to describe in it what I love about Greek, that language innocent of all quirks and cranks; a language obsessed with action, and with the joy of seeing action multiply from action, action marching relentlessly ahead and with yet more actions filing in from either side to fall into neat step at the rear, in a long straight rank of cause and effect toward what will be inevitable, the only possible end. In a certain sense, this was why I felt so close to the other in the Greek class. They, too, knew this beautiful and harrowing landscape, centuries dead; they'd had the same experience of looking up from their books with fifth-century eyes and finding the world disconcertingly sluggish and alien, as if it were not their home. It was why I admired Julian, and Henry in particular. Their reason, their very eyes and ears were fixed irrevocably in the confines of those stern and ancient rhythms โ€“ the world, in fact, was not their home, at least the world as I knew it โ€“ and far from being occasional visitors to this land which I myself knew only as an admiring tourist, they were pretty much its permanent residents, as permanent as I suppose it was possible for them to be. Ancient Greek is a difficult language, a very difficult language indeed, and it is eminently possible to study it all one's life and never be able to speak a word; but it makes me smile, even today, to think of Henry's calculated, formal English, the English of a well-educated foreigner, as compared with the marvelous fluency and self-assurance of his Greek โ€“ quick, eloquent, remarkably witty. It was always a wonder to me when I happened to hear him and Julian conversing in Greek, arguing and joking, as I never once heard either of them do in English; many times, I've seen Henry pick up the telephone with an irritable, cautious 'Hello,' and may I never forget the harsh and irresistible delight of his 'Khairei!' when Julian happened to be at the other end.
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Donna Tartt (The Secret History)