“He who is happy ought to stay at home;
There should he also stay, who speeds not well.”
And Euripides, too, shouting the like on the stage:
“Happy the man who, prosperous, stays at home.”
Menander, too, on comedy, saying:
“He ought at home to stay, and free remain,
Or be no longer rightly happy.”
Again, Theognis having said:
“The exile has no comrade dear and true,”—
Euripides has written: