“Things are not always what they seem.”
Non semper ea sunt quae videntur.
Phaedrus könyv Fables
Book IV, fable 2, line 5.
Fables
Phaedrus, teljes nevén Caius Iulius Phaedrus , trák származású ókori római meseköltő.

“Things are not always what they seem.”
Non semper ea sunt quae videntur.
Phaedrus könyv Fables
Book IV, fable 2, line 5.
Fables
“Submit to the present evil, lest a greater one befall you.”
Phaedrus könyv Fables
Book I, fable 2, line 31.
Fables
Phaedrus könyv Fables
Book I, fable 25, line 3.
Fables
Phaedrus könyv Fables
Book I, fable 10, line 1.
Fables
Phaedrus könyv Fables
Book I, fable 13, line 13.
Fables
“No one returns with good-will to the place which has done him a mischief.”
Phaedrus könyv Fables
Book I, fable 18, line 1.
Fables
“He who covets what belongs to another deservedly loses his own.”
Phaedrus könyv Fables
Book I, fable 4, line 1.
Fables
Phaedrus könyv Fables
Book IV, fable 23, line 1.
Fables
Phaedrus könyv Fables
Book V, fable 9, line 4.
Fables
“A learned man always has riches within himself.”
Homo doctus in se semper divitias habet.
Phaedrus könyv Fables
Book VI, fable 22, line 1
Fables
Phaedrus könyv Fables
Book V, fable 3, line 1.
Fables
Phaedrus könyv Fables
Book I, fable 9, line 1.
Fables
“Once lost, Jupiter himself cannot bring back opportunity.”
Phaedrus könyv Fables
Book V, fable 7, line 4.
Fables
“Every one is bound to bear patiently the results of his own example.”
Phaedrus könyv Fables
Book I, fable 26, line 12.
Fables