BOOK ONE
BOOK TWO
See how tragedy is made when common things happen to silly men.
Such are the wishes that they utter.
BOOK THREE
he answered, when he was half-asleep,
So he was conscious of his own qualification, and knew her weakness.
And still earlier it was the fortune of Hercules to visit all the inhabited world
BOOK FOUR
There are certain penalties fixed as by law for those who disobey the divine administration. Whoever thinks any other thing to be good except those things which depend on the will, let him envy, let him desire, let him flatter, let him be perturbed: whoever considers anything else to be evil, let him grieve, let him lament, let him weep, let him be unhappy. And yet, though so severely punished, we cannot desist.
Remember what the poet says about the stranger:
Stranger, I must not, e'en if a worse man come.