>>20285442(cont.)
> "To this Hector of the gleaming helm made no answer, but Helen spoke to him in gentle tones: ‘Brother, I am indeed that wicked she-dog [slut] whom all abhor. I wish that on the day of my birth, some vile blast of wind had blown me to the mountains, or into the waves of the echoing sea, where the waters would have drowned me, and none of this would have come about. But since the gods ordained this fate, I wish that I had a better man for husband, who felt the reproaches and contempt of his fellow men. But this man of mine is fickle, and ever will be so, and will reap the harvest of it hereafter. But enter, now and be seated, my brother, since you are the most troubled in mind of all, through my shamelessness and Paris’ folly. Zeus has brought an evil fate upon us, and in days to come we shall be a song for those yet unborn." - ibid, bk. VI >[Thetis to Achilles]: "Why not find comfort with some woman, since you have but a brief time left to live, and the shadows of Death and remorseless Fate are already close upon you." - ibid, bk. XXIII c. 800-700 BC: The Odyssey
>"So true is it that there is nothing more dread or more shameless than a woman who puts into her heart such deeds [...]" —Homer. The Odyssey with an English Translation by A.T. Murray, PH.D. in two volumes, Book XI.[12]>"And another thing will I tell thee, and do thou lay it to heart: in secret and not openly do thou bring thy ship to the shore of thy dear native land; for no longer is there faith in women." —Homer. The Odyssey with an English Translation by A.T. Murray, PH.D. in two volumes, Book XI.[13]