Top 18 Quotes & Sayings by Theognis of Megara

Explore popular quotes and sayings by a Greek poet Theognis of Megara.
Last updated on December 21, 2024.
Theognis of Megara

Theognis of Megara was a Greek lyric poet active in approximately the sixth century BC. The work attributed to him consists of gnomic poetry quite typical of the time, featuring ethical maxims and practical advice about life. He was the first Greek poet known to express concern over the eventual fate and survival of his own work and, along with Homer, Hesiod and the authors of the Homeric Hymns, he is among the earliest poets whose work has been preserved in a continuous manuscript tradition. In fact more than half of the extant elegiac poetry of Greece before the Alexandrian period is included in the approximately 1,400 lines of verse attributed to him. Some of these verses inspired ancient commentators to value him as a moralist yet the entire corpus is valued today for its "warts and all" portrayal of aristocratic life in archaic Greece.

One finds many companions for food and drink, but in a serious business a man's companions are very few.
Adopt the character of the twisting octopus, which takes on the appearance of the nearby rock . Now follow in this direction, now turn a different hue.
Ploutos , no wonder mortals worship you: You are so tolerant of their sins ! — © Theognis of Megara
Ploutos , no wonder mortals worship you: You are so tolerant of their sins !
Bright youth passes swiftly as a thought.
Boy, you're like a horse. Just now sated with seed, You've come back to my stable, Yearning for a good rider, fine meadow, An icy spring, shady groves.
Surfeit begets insolence, when prosperity comes to a bad man.
Even to a wicked man a divinity gives wealth, Cyrnus, but to few men comes the gift of excellence.
Ram, ass, and horse, my Kyrnos, we look over With care, and seek good stock for good to cover; And yet the best men make no argument, But wed, for money, runts of poor descent. So too a woman will demean her state And spurn the better for the richer mate. Money's the cry. Good stock to bad is wed And bad to good, till all the world's cross-bred. No wonder if the country's breed declines- Mixed metal, Kyrnos, that but dimly shines.
Unless the gods deceive my mind , That man is forging fetters for himself.
Not to be born at all would be the best thing for man.
Fairly examined, truly understood, No man is wholly bad, nor wholly good.
Rash, angry words, and spoken out of season, When passion has usurp'd the throne of reason, Have ruin'd many. Passion is unjust, And for an idle, transitory gust Of gratified revenge, dooms us to pay With long repentance at a later day.
Too many tongues have gates which fly apart Too easily, and care for many things That don't concern them.
The greatest treasure you can leave your children is a sense of modesty and the advice to follow virtuous persons.
When we are dead; rugs are no richer than a quick-thorn bed.
Restrain thy mind, and let mildness ever attend thy tongue.
To many men well-fitting doors are not set on their tongues. — © Theognis of Megara
To many men well-fitting doors are not set on their tongues.
He who mistrusts most should be trusted least.
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