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
This, then, may be applied even to a father: "I must not, even if a worse man than you should come, treat a father unworthily-, for all are from paternal Zeus." And of a brother, "For all are from the Zeus who presides over kindred." And so in the other relations of life we shall find Zeus to be an inspector.