Homer — "Nobody -- that's my name. Nobody -- so my mother and father call me, all my frie…"
Nobody -- that's my name. Nobody -- so my mother and father call me, all my friends.
Nobody -- that's my name. Nobody -- so my mother and father call me, all my friends.
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"Suffering is but another name for the teaching of experience, which is the parent of instruction and the schoolmaster of life."
"It is a brave thing to be a hero."
"Wine can of their wits the wise beguile, Make the sage frolic, and the serious smile."
"We men are wretched things, and the gods, who have no cares themselves, have woven sorrow into the very pattern of our lives...Zeus the Thunderer has two jars standing on the floor of his palace, in w…"
"Even a fool learns something by experience."
Greek epic poet traditionally credited with the Iliad and the Odyssey, the foundational works of Western literature. Closely associated with Hesiod (near-contemporary Greek poet of Theogony and Works and Days). For an intellectual contrast, see Plato, Greek philosopher of the Republic — Republic Book X bans the poets from the ideal city, with Homer as the explicit target — Plato argued Homer's gods set immoral examples and that poetry corrupts moral education. The founding philosophy-versus-poetry quarrel of Western thought.
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