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“Excavations at Ai Khanoum on the northern border of modern Afghanistan have produced great quantities of Greek inscriptions and even the remnants of a philosophical treatise originally on papyrus. One of the most interesting is the base of a dedication by one Klearchos, perhaps the known student of Aristotle, that records his bringing to this new Greek city, Alexandria on the Oxus, the traditional maxims from the shrine of Apollo at Delphi concerning the five ages of man:
In childhood, seemliness
In youth, self-control
In middle age, justice
In old age, wise council
In death, painlessness”
―
In childhood, seemliness
In youth, self-control
In middle age, justice
In old age, wise council
In death, painlessness”
―
“I wish I was here, or I wish I was there...' In our age of global travel we are all potential heirs to the simile of Hera's flight.”
― Travelling Heroes
― Travelling Heroes
“Their (the Greeks)encounters with foreign were not coloured by the belief that such people's religion was false and inferior, the belief that thinges Christians, Muslims, Hindus or atheist nowadays”
― Travelling Heroes: Greeks and Their Myths in the Epic Age of Homer
― Travelling Heroes: Greeks and Their Myths in the Epic Age of Homer
“Good governance, Nicias says, is when ‘someone benefits his country as much as possible or does it no willing harm.”
― The Invention of Medicine: From Homer to Hippocrates
― The Invention of Medicine: From Homer to Hippocrates
“Those who idealize the past tend not to understand it: restoration kills it with kindness.”
― The Classical World: An Epic History of Greece and Rome
― The Classical World: An Epic History of Greece and Rome
“From Death alone man will not procure a refuge, but from diseases hard to resist he has devised escapes’.16”
― The Invention of Medicine: From Homer to Hippocrates
― The Invention of Medicine: From Homer to Hippocrates
“blameless Ethiopians’. They are people with burnt faces, dark-skinned therefore, but they are not the Ethiopians of modern repute: the Odyssey divides them between the eastern and western edges of the world.15 Being blameless, they are able to entertain the gods to a banquet face to face: for Homer indeed, dark lives matter.”
― Homer and His Iliad
― Homer and His Iliad




