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Dinarchus, Against Aristogiton, section 24 (search)
Dinarchus, Against Aristogiton, section 25 (search)
Dinarchus, Against Philocles, section 17 (search)
Then why will you wait, Athenians? What further crimes do you wish to hear of
greater than those we have mentioned? Was it not you and your ancestors who made
no allowance for Timotheus,This passage
corresponds almost word for word with Din. 1.14.
See note on that. though he had sailed round the Peloponnese and beaten the Spartans in the
sea-fight at Corcyra, though his father
was Conon who liberated Greece and he
himself had taken Samos, Methone, Pydna, Potidaea, and twenty cities besides? You did not take
this record into consideration at all, or allow such services to outweigh the
case before you or the oaths which you swear before giving your verdict, but
fined him a hundred talents, because Aristophon said he had been bribed by the
Chians and Rhodians.
Croesus, the king of the Lydians, under the
guise of sending to Delphi, dispatched Eurybatus of
Ephesus to the Peloponnesus, having given him money with which to recruit as many mercenaries as
he could from among the Greeks. But this agent of Croesus went over to Cyrus the Persian and
revealed everything to him. Consequently the wickedness of Eurybatus became a by-word among the
Greeks, and to this day whenever a man wishes to cast another's knavery in his teeth he calls
him a Eurybatus.Const. Exc. 2 (1), p. 220.
During this time the Cercyraeans, who had
fitted out sixty triremes, were waiting off the Peloponnesus, being unable, as they themselves allege, to round the promontory at
Malea, but, as certain historians tell us, anxiously awaiting the turn of the war, in order
that, if the Persians prevailed, they might then give had been razed, were exceedingly disheartened. And likewise great fear
gripped the other Greeks who, driven from every quarter, were now cooped up in the Peloponnesus alone. Consequently they thought it desirable that
all who had been charged with command should meet in council and deliberate regarding the kind
of they should suffer any reverse in the battle,
the defeated would be able to withdraw for refuge into the most suitable place of safety
available, the Peloponnesus, whereas, if they cooped
themselves up in the little island of Salamis, perils
would beset them from which it would be difficult for them to be rescu