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Aging & Wisdom Quote by Sophocles

"Old age and the passage of time teach all things"

About this Quote

Time is Sophocles' most unsentimental teacher: it doesn’t persuade, it grinds. “Old age and the passage of time teach all things” lands with the fatal calm of a playwright who has watched brilliance, piety, and power get corrected by consequences. The line isn’t motivational; it’s forensic. Knowledge arrives not as insight but as residue, what’s left after ambition has burned down and denial has run out of fuel.

The intent is double-edged. On one level, it elevates experience over theory: you can’t be argued into wisdom, you have to live into it. On another, it smuggles in a darker claim about human stubbornness. If time teaches “all things,” it’s because we refuse most lessons until reality makes them unavoidable. Old age becomes less a badge of honor than a record of survived errors.

In Sophocles’ cultural context, that rings with Greek ideas of pathei mathos - learning through suffering - and with the civic drama of Athens, where tragedies functioned as public thought experiments about responsibility, pride, and fate. His characters don’t change because someone gives a good speech; they change because the world closes in. That’s the subtext: persuasion is weak, time is strong.

Rhetorically, the sentence is bluntly totalizing - “all things” - a sweeping claim that feels earned precisely because it’s spoken from the far end of the story. It flatters no one. It offers comfort only in the most austere way: sooner or later, the truth will get through, even if it arrives with gray hair and a bill.

Quote Details

TopicAging
Source
Verified source: Sophocles: Fragments (Sophocles, 1994)ISBN: 9780674995321
Text match: 95.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
γῆρας διδάσκει πάντα καὶ χρόνου τριβή (Fragment (Tyro), 586). The saying commonly rendered in English as “Old age and the passage of time teach all things” is attributed in scholarly references to Sophocles, fragment 586, from the lost play Tyro. The English wording appears to be a translation/paraphrase of the Greek fragment, not the original wording itself. I could verify a modern primary-text edition of Sophocles’ fragments and corroborating scholarly references identifying the fragment as Tyro 586. Because Sophocles’ works survive through manuscript transmission and fragment collections, the original ancient publication date cannot be established in the modern sense; the surviving standard source is a critical edition. The quote is therefore best verified as a fragment of Sophocles rather than as a line from a surviving complete play.
Other candidates (1)
The History of Old Age in England, 1600-1800, Part I Vol 1 (Lynn Botelho, Susannah R Ottaway, Ann..., 2024) compilation95.0%
... Old Age and the Passage of Time Teach All Things Sophocles, Fragment (Tyro), 586 Understanding the ageing process...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Sophocles. (2026, March 13). Old age and the passage of time teach all things. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/old-age-and-the-passage-of-time-teach-all-things-133865/

Chicago Style
Sophocles. "Old age and the passage of time teach all things." FixQuotes. March 13, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/old-age-and-the-passage-of-time-teach-all-things-133865/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Old age and the passage of time teach all things." FixQuotes, 13 Mar. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/old-age-and-the-passage-of-time-teach-all-things-133865/. Accessed 17 Mar. 2026.

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Old Age and Time Teach All Things - Sophocles
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Sophocles

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

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