Cherished in old age amid such honour and good will, like a common father, a slight cause co-operated with his great age to bring him to his end.1 A number of days having been allowed in which the Syracusans might prepare for his funeral, while the country folk and strangers came together, the whole ceremony was conducted with great magnificence, and besides, young men selected by lot carried his bier with all its decorations through the precinct where the palace of Dionysius had stood before Timoleon destroyed it.
1 In 337 or 336 B.C.
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