Author: Hesiod
Cited by
- Brian Crawford (2)
- IN: Screams in the Night (2017) Young Adult Fiction, American
EPIGRAPH: But the woman took off the great lid of the jar with her hands and scattered all these, and her thought caused sorrow and mischief to men. Only Hope remained there in an unbreakable home within under the rim of the great jar, and did not fly out at the door."
FROM: Works and Days, (-700), Poem, Greece
- IN: Prisoners of War: Screams in the Night (2017) Fiction, Young Adult Fiction, American
EPIGRAPH: But the woman took off the great lid of the jar with her hands and scattered all these, and her thought caused sorrow and mischief to men. Only Hope remained there in an unbreakable home within under the rim of the great jar, and did not fly out at the door.
FROM: NULL, (None), NULL, Greece
- Rob Thurman (1)
- IN: Slashback (2013) Fiction, American
EPIGRAPH: A bad neighbor is a misfortune. . . .
FROM: Works and Days, (-700), Poem, Greece
- P.C and Cast, Kristin Cast (1)
- IN: Marked (2007) Young adult fiction, Paranormal romance, American
EPIGRAPH: There also stands the gloomy house of Night;
ghastly clouds shroud it in darkness.
Before it Atlas stands erect and on his head
and unwearying arms firmly supports the broad sky,
where Night and Day cross a bronze threshold
and then come close and greet each other.
FROM: From Hesiod's poem to Nyx, the Greek personification of night, Hesiod, Theogony, 744 ff., (-700), Poem, Greece
- Jayne Anne Phillips (1)
- IN: Machine Dreams (1984) Fiction, American
EPIGRAPH: Now he (Pegasus) flew away and left the earth, the mother of flocks, and came to the deathless gods: and he dwells in the house of Zeus and brings to wise Zeus the thunder and lightning.
FROM: The Theogony, vv. 284-86, (700), Poem, Greece