Euripide: Frasi in inglese

Euripide era tragediografo ateniese. Frasi in inglese.
Euripide: 169   frasi 97   Mi piace

“He who believes needs no explanation.”

Euripidés Le Baccanti

Origine: The Bacchae

“Account no man happy till he dies.”

Sophocles in Oedipus Rex
Variant in Herodotus 1.32: Count no man happy until he is dead.
Misattributed

“When good men die their goodness does not perish,
But lives though they are gone.”

Temenidæ Frag. 734
Contesto: When good men die their goodness does not perish,
But lives though they are gone. As for the bad,
All that was theirs dies and is buried with them.

“Doth some one say that there be gods above?
There are not; no, there are not. Let no fool,
Led by the old false fable, thus deceive you.”

Euripidés Bellerophon

Bellerophon
Contesto: Doth some one say that there be gods above?
There are not; no, there are not. Let no fool,
Led by the old false fable, thus deceive you.
Look at the facts themselves, yielding my words
No undue credence: for I say that kings
Kill, rob, break oaths, lay cities waste by fraud,
And doing thus are happier than those
Who live calm pious lives day after day. All divinity
Is built-up from our good and evil luck.

“This is slavery, not to speak one's thought.”

Euripidés The Phoenician Women

Variante: Who dares not speak his free thoughts is a slave.
Origine: The Phoenician Women (c.411-409 BC)

“In case of dissension, never dare to judge till you've heard the other side.”

Heraclidæ (c 428 BC); quoted by Aristophanes in The Wasps
Origine: The Children of Herakles

“Love is all we have, the only way that each can help the other.”

Euripidés Oreste

Origine: Orestes (408 BC), l. 298, as translated by William Arrowsmith

“Man's most valuable trait
is a judicious sense of what not to believe.”

Euripidés Helen

The Complete Greek Tragedies: Euripides II: Helen. Hecuba. Andromache. The Trojan women. Ion. Rhesus. The suppliant women by David Grene, Richmond Alexander Lattimore (eds.), Modern Library, 1963, p. 73

“The gifts of a bad man bring no good with them.”

Euripidés Medea

Origine: Medea (431 BC), Line 618