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Athens: Its Rise and Fall, Complete

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[ Thucyd., lib. i.

145 (return (#x16_x_16_i53))

[ Ibid., lib. i. Plut. in vit. Cim. Diod. Sic., lib. xi.

146 (return (#x16_x_16_i55))

[ See Clinton, Fast. Hell., vol. ii., p. 34, in comment upon Bentley.

147 (return (#x16_x_16_i57))

[ Athenaeus, lib. xii.

148 (return (#x16_x_16_i57))

[ Plut. in vit. Them.

149 (return (#x16_x_16_i59))

[ Plut. in vit. Aristid.

150 (return (#x16_x_16_i64))

[ About twenty-three English acres. This was by no means a despicable estate in the confined soil of Attica.

151 (return (#x17_x_17_i2))

[ Aristot. apud Plat. vit. Cim.

152 (return (#x17_x_17_i2))

[ Produced equally by the anti-popular party on popular pretexts. It was under the sanction of Mr. Pitt that the prostitution of charity to the able-bodied was effected in England.

153 (return (#x17_x_17_i6))

[ Plut. in vit. Cim.

154 (return (#x17_x_17_i9))

[ His father’s brother, Cleomenes, died raving mad, as we have already seen. There was therefore insanity in the family.

155 (return (#x17_x_17_i9))

[ Plut. in vit. Cim. Pausanias, lib. iii., c. 17.

156 (return (#x17_x_17_i10))

[ Pausarias, lib. iii., c. 17.

157 (return (#x17_x_17_i10))

[ Phigalea, according to Pausanias.

158 (return (#x17_x_17_i10))

[ Plut. in vit. Cim.

159 (return (#x17_x_17_i12))

[ Thucyd., lib. i.

160 (return (#x17_x_17_i16))

[ Plato, leg. vi.

161 (return (#x17_x_17_i23))

[ Nep. in vit. Paus.

162 (return (#x17_x_17_i23))

[ Pausanias observes that his renowned namesake was the only suppliant taking refuge at the sanctuary of Minerva Chalcioecus who did not obtain the divine protection, and this because he could never purify himself of the murder of Cleonice.

163 (return (#x17_x_17_i25))

[ Thucyd., lib. i., 136.

164 (return (#x17_x_17_i29))

[ Plut. in vit. Them.

165 (return (#x17_x_17_i29))

[ Thucyd., lib. i., 137.

166 (return (#x17_x_17_i29))

[ Mr. Mitford, while doubting the fact, attempts, with his usual disingenuousness, to raise upon the very fact that he doubts, reproaches against the horrors of democratical despotism. A strange practice for an historian to allow the premises to be false, and then to argue upon them as true!

167 (return (#x17_x_17_i32))

[ The brief letter to Artaxerxes, given by Thucydides (lib i., 137), is as evidently the composition of Thucydides himself as is the celebrated oration which he puts into the mouth of Pericles. Each has the hard, rigid, and grasping style so peculiar to the historian, and to which no other Greek writer bears the slightest resemblance. But the matter may be more genuine than the diction.

168 (return (#x17_x_17_i34))

[ At the time of his arrival in Asia, Xerxes seems to have been still living. But he appeared at Susa during the short interval between the death of Xerxes and the formal accession of his son, when, by a sanguinary revolution, yet to be narrated, Artabanus was raised to the head of the Persian empire: ere the year expired Artaxerxes was on the throne.

169 (return (#x17_x_17_i36))

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