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[19]
Furthermore, the fact that it is unjust to entertain concerning Lycurgus the opposite
opinion to the one you held while he lived, and that justice demands that you should have
more regard for the dead than for the living, and all such considerations I shall pass
over, for I assume them to be universally agreed upon. Of the children of others, however,
whom you recompensed for their fathers' good services I would gladly see you reminded; for
instance, the descendants of Aristeides, Thrasybulus, Archinus and many others.1 Not by way of censure have I cited these examples,
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for so far am I from censuring as to declare it my belief that such
repayments are in the highest degree in the interest of the State, because you challenge
all men by such conduct to be champions of the people, when they observe that, even if
during their own lives envy shall stand in the way of their receiving merited honors, yet
their children, at any rate, will be sure to receive their due rewards at your hands.
1 At times the Athenian Assembly bestowed extravagant gifts upon the children of famous men, as may be learned from Plut. Arist. 27. At other times it acted heartlessly, if we may believe Dem. 19.280 ff. Archinus was one of the restorers of democracy in 403 B.C., but the greater share of the credit went to Thrasybulus.