Jason and the Golden Fleece Quotes
Jason and the Golden Fleece
by
Apollonius of Rhodes11,425 ratings, 3.82 average rating, 599 reviews
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Jason and the Golden Fleece Quotes
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“A working woman, rising before dawn to spin and needing light in her cottage room, piles brushwood on a smoldering log, and the whole heap kindled by the little brand goes up in a mighty blaze. Such was the fire of Love, stealthy but all-consuming, that swept through Medea's heart. In the turmoil of her soul, her soft cheeks turned from rose to white and white to rose.”
― Jason and the Golden Fleece
― Jason and the Golden Fleece
“It is a fact that we tribes of suffering men never plant our feet firmly upon the path of joy, but there is ever some bitter pain to keep company with our delight.”
― Jason and the Golden Fleece
― Jason and the Golden Fleece
“Listen then. Not everything is it lawful for you to know clearly; but whatever is heaven's will, I will not hide. I was infatuated aforetime, when in my folly I declared the will of Zeus in order and to the end. For he himself wishes to deliver to men the utterances of the prophetic art incomplete, in order that they may still have some need to know the will of heaven.”
― The Argonautica
― The Argonautica
“And so a barrow to this hero was raised in that land, and there stands a token for men of later days to see, the trunk of a wild olive tree, such as ships are built of; and it flourishes with its green leaves a little below the Acherusian headland. And”
― The Argonautica
― The Argonautica
“Thus, though I learnt my fate from evil omens even before now, I have left my fatherland to embark on the ship, that so after my embarking fair fame may be left me in my house.”
― The Argonautica
― The Argonautica
“With these words of prayer he threw the barley-grains. The two heroes responsible for the oxen, might Ankaios and Herakles, girded themselves in preparation. The latter crashed his club down on the middle of the forehead of one ox; in one movement its heavy body fell to the ground. Ankaios cut the other's broad neck with his bronze axe, slicing through the tough tendons; it fell sprawling over its two horns. Their comrades quickly slaughtered and flayed the oxen, chopping and cutting them up and removing the thigh pieces for sacrifice These they covered all over with a thick layer of fat and burnt them on spits, while the son of Aison poured libations of unmixed wine. Idmon rejoiced as he gazed at the flame, which burnt brightly all around the sacrifices, and the favourable omen of the murky smoke, darting up in dark spirals.”
― Jason and the Golden Fleece
― Jason and the Golden Fleece
“To mortal men the gods allot woes which cannot be foreseen.”
― Jason and the Golden Fleece
― Jason and the Golden Fleece
“The men could only offer the god the paltry sorts of things”
― Jason and the Argonauts
― Jason and the Argonauts
“si es que tú también eres de la raza de las criaturas humanas, a las que el velocísimo pensamiento en fugaces locuras las desliza hacia la loca perdición. Así cayó apasionado mi corazón, y no por necedad”
― The Argonautics of Apollonius Rhodius Translated: With Notes and Observations, Critical, Historical, and Explanatory; In Four Volumes, Vols. I-II
― The Argonautics of Apollonius Rhodius Translated: With Notes and Observations, Critical, Historical, and Explanatory; In Four Volumes, Vols. I-II
“Maia’s famous son:”
― Jason and the Argonauts
― Jason and the Argonauts
“so that the wedding would be more distinctive 1460and memorable in song.”
― Jason and the Argonauts
― Jason and the Argonauts
“Nysaean son”
― Jason and the Argonauts
― Jason and the Argonauts
