James Wood, comp. Dictionary of Quotations. 1899.
Euripides
[Greek]—He is the best diviner who conjectures well.
[Greek]—I hate a learned woman. Let no woman in my house know more than a woman should.
[Greek]—My tongue has sworn, but my mind is unsworn.
[Greek]—There is always a pleasure in variety.
[Greek]—What is natural is never shameful.
[Greek]—Where there is no longer any wine there is no love.
Goodness and being in the gods are one; / He who imputes ill to them makes them none.
Had I succeeded well, I had been reckoned amongst the wise; so ready are we to judge from the event.
He is wise that is wise to himself.
Silence and discretion are specially becoming in a woman, and to remain quietly at home.
The language of truth is simple.
The sorrow of Yesterday is as nothing; that of To-day is bearable; but that of To-morrow is gigantic, because indistinct.
Time will discover everything to posterity; it is a babbler, and speaks even when no question is put.
To a father waxing old nothing is dearer than a daughter.
Youth holds no society with grief.
Zeus hates busybodies and those who do too much.