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Life & Wisdom Quote by Sophocles

"But this is a true saying among men: the gifts of enemies are no gifts and profitless"

About this Quote

A gift from an enemy is never just a gift; its ribbon is a leash. Sophocles compresses an entire political psychology into that blunt, almost proverb-like line: what looks like generosity in the hands of an adversary is more often a bid for control, a test of loyalty, or a way to launder aggression into civility. The phrase "true saying among men" matters because it frames suspicion as hard-earned social knowledge, not paranoid temperament. This isn’t private bitterness; it’s communal realism.

The subtext is transactional and theatrical at once. In Sophoclean tragedy, power rarely announces itself as power. It arrives as counsel, hospitality, alliance, mercy. Accepting the enemy’s gift risks becoming complicit in their story about you: that you can be bought, that your grievance can be managed, that your autonomy is negotiable. And if you refuse? You look unreasonable. The trap is reputational as much as material.

Contextually, this fits a world where reciprocity is a binding system, not a warm sentiment. Gift exchange in Greek culture created obligations; it set terms. To take something is to owe something, and tragedy is largely the genre of fatal obligations piling up. Sophocles is warning that when an enemy enters the economy of favors, the price is hidden and the repayment is demanded at the worst moment.

The line also carries an austere ethical edge: even if the gift seems to "profit", it’s "profitless" because it corrodes judgment. It buys a pause, a softness, a delay in seeing the threat clearly - and in tragic time, delay is destiny.

Quote Details

TopicBetrayal
Source
Unverified source: Ajax (Sophocles, -440)
Text match: 85.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
Line 665 (often cited as 664–665). This quote is a (fairly literal) English rendering of Sophocles, Ajax 664–665: «ἀλλ᾽ ἔστ᾽ ἀληθὴς ἡ βροτῶν παροιμία, ἐχθρῶν ἄδωρα δῶρα κοὐκ ὀνήσιμα» (“…men’s proverb is true: the gifts of enemies are no gifts and bring no good”). The play Ajax is conventionally d...
Other candidates (1)
Sophocles (Sophocles) compilation47.1%
more line 522 tr r c trevelyan 1919 ἐχθρῶν ἄδωρα δώρα κοὐκ ὀνήσιμα the gifts of enemies are no gifts and
Cite

Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Sophocles. (2026, January 13). But this is a true saying among men: the gifts of enemies are no gifts and profitless. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/but-this-is-a-true-saying-among-men-the-gifts-of-34827/

Chicago Style
Sophocles. "But this is a true saying among men: the gifts of enemies are no gifts and profitless." FixQuotes. January 13, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/but-this-is-a-true-saying-among-men-the-gifts-of-34827/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"But this is a true saying among men: the gifts of enemies are no gifts and profitless." FixQuotes, 13 Jan. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/but-this-is-a-true-saying-among-men-the-gifts-of-34827/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.

More Quotes by Sophocles Add to List
The Gifts of Enemies Are No Gifts: Sophocles' Wisdom
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About the Author

Sophocles

Sophocles (496 BC - 405 BC) was a Author from Greece.

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