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Athens: Its Rise and Fall, Complete

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[ Plut. in vit. Arist.

95 (return (#x15_x_15_i25))

[ Ibid.

96 (return (#x15_x_15_i30))

[ The custom of lapidation was common to the earlier ages; it had a kind of sanction, too, in particular offences; and no crime could be considered by a brave and inflamed people equal to that of advice against their honour and their liberties.

97 (return (#x15_x_15_i36))

[ See Herod., lib. ix., c. 10. Also Mr. Clinton on the Kings of Sparta. Fast. Hell., vol. ii., p. 187.

98 (return (#x15_x_15_i36))

[ See Herod., lib, vi., c. 58. After the burial of a Spartan king, ten days were devoted to mourning; nor was any public business transacted in that interval.

99 (return (#x15_x_15_i37))

[ “According to Aristides’ decree,” says Plutarch, “the Athenian envoys were Aristides, Xanthippus, Myronides, and Cimon.”

100 (return (#x15_x_15_i38))

[ Herodotus speaks of the devastation and ruin as complete. But how many ages did the monuments of Pisistratus survive the ravage of the Persian sword!

101 (return (#x15_x_15_i40))

[ Plut. in vit. Arist.

102 (return (#x15_x_15_i41))

[ This, among a thousand anecdotes, proves how salutary and inevitable was the popular distrust of the aristocracy. When we read of the process of bribing the principal men, and of the conspiracy entered into by others, we must treat with contempt those accusations of the jealousy of the Grecian people towards their superiors which form the staple declamations of commonplace historians.

103 (return (#x15_x_15_i45))

[ Gargaphia is one mile and a half from the town of Plataea. Gell’s Itin. 112.

104 (return (#x15_x_15_i47))

[ Plut. in vit. Arist.

105 (return (#x15_x_15_i50))

[ A strange fall from the ancient splendour of Mycenae, to furnish only four hundred men, conjointly with Tiryns, to the cause of Greece!

106 (return (#x15_x_15_i62))

[ Her., lib. ix., c. 45.

107 (return (#x15_x_15_i64))

[ Plutarch in vit. Arist.

108 (return (#x15_x_15_i65))

[ This account, by Herodotus, of the contrast between the Spartan and the Athenian leaders, which is amply supported elsewhere, is, as I have before hinted, a proof of the little effect upon Spartan emulation produced by the martyrdom of Leonidas. Undoubtedly the Spartans were more terrified by the slaughter of Thermopylae than fired by the desire of revenge.

109 (return (#x15_x_15_i67))

[ “Here seem to be several islands, formed by a sluggish stream in a flat meadow. (Oeroe?) must have been of that description.– “Gell’s Itin, 109.

110 (return (#x15_x_15_i69))

[ Herod., lib. ix., c. 54.

111 (return (#x15_x_15_i74))

[ Plut. in vit. Arist.

112 (return (#x15_x_15_i75))

[ Sir W. Gell’s Itin. of Greece.

113 (return (#x15_x_15_i77))

[ Herod. lib. ix., c. 62.

114 (return (#x15_x_15_i83))

[ The Tegeans had already seized the tent of Mardonius, possessing themselves especially of a curious brazen manger, from which the Persian’s horse was fed, and afterward dedicated to the Alean Minerva.

115 (return (#x15_x_15_i88))

[ I adopt the reading of Valcknaer, “tous hippeas.” The Spartan knights, in number three hundred, had nothing to do with the cavalry, but fought on foot or on horseback, as required. (Dionys. Hal., xi., 13.) They formed the royal bodyguard.

116 (return (#x16_x_16_i10))

[ Mr. Mitford attributes his absence from the scene to some jealousy of the honours he received at Sparta, and the vain glory with which he bore them. But the vague observations in the authors he refers to by no means bear out this conjecture, nor does it seem probable that the jealousy was either general or keen enough to effect so severe a loss to the public cause. Menaced with grave and imminent peril, it was not while the Athenians were still in the camp that they would have conceived all the petty envies of the forum. The jealousies Themistocles excited were of much later date. It is probable that at this period he was intrusted with the very important charge of watching over and keeping together that considerable but scattered part of the Athenian population which was not engaged either at Mycale or Plataea.

117 (return (#x16_x_16_i11))

[ Thucyd., lib. i., c. 89.

118 (return (#x16_x_16_i11))

[ Ibid., lib. i., c. 90.

119 (return (#x16_x_16_i12))

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