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" the whole Hellenic world was in commotion; in every city the chiefs of the democracy and of the oligarchy were struggling, the one to bring in the Athenians, the other the Lacedaemonians. Now in time of peace, men would have had no excuse for introducing... "
Thucydides - Page 213
by Thucydides - 1881
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College Greek Course in English, Volume 59

William Cleaver Wilkinson - 1884 - 348 pages
...philosophizing taste and capacity of the historian's mind. We give a considerable extract: Not long afterward the whole Hellenic world was in commotion ; in every...struggling, the one to bring in the Athenians, the others the Lacedaemonians. Now, in time of peace, men would have had no excuse for introducing either,...
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College Greek Course in English

William Cleaver Wilkinson - 1884 - 350 pages
...philosophizing taste and capacity of the historian's mind. We give a considerable extract: Not long afterward the whole Hellenic world was in commotion ; in every...struggling, the one to bring in the Athenians, the others the Lacedaemonians. Now, in time of peace, men would have had no excuse for introducing either,...
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College Greek Course in English

William Cleaver Wilkinson - 1884 - 328 pages
...philosophizing taste and capacity of the historian's mind. We give a considerable extract: Not long afterward the whole Hellenic world was in commotion ; in every...struggling, the one to bring in the Athenians, the others the Lacedaemonians. Now, in time of peace, men would have had no excuse for introducing either,...
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College Greek Course in English

William Cleaver Wilkinson - 1888 - 342 pages
...philosophizing taste and capacity of the historian's mind. We give a considerable extract: Not long afterward the whole Hellenic world was in commotion; in every...struggling, the one to bring in the Athenians, the others the Lacedaemonians. Now, in time of peace, men would have had no excuse for introducing either,...
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Greece in the Age of Pericles

Arthur James Grant - 1893 - 366 pages
...have struck Thucydides more than any other. In the eighty-second chapter of the third book he says : " In every city the chiefs of the democracy and of the...and no desire to do so, but when they were at war the dissatisfied party was only too ready to invoke foreign aid." And with special bitterness he speaks...
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Greece in the Age of Pericles

Arthur James Grant - 1893 - 362 pages
...have struck Thucydides more than any other. In the eighty-second chapter of the third book he says : " In every city the chiefs of the democracy and of the...and no desire to do so, but when they were at war the dissatisfied party was only too ready to invoke foreign aid." And with special bitterness he speaks...
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Thucydides, book III, Book 3

Thucydides - 1894 - 344 pages
...on /cinjo-is, i. I. 8. — бшфоршу cnicrwv . . . TOVS AaKcSaipiovCovs : ' ' since everywhere the chiefs of the democracy and of the oligarchy were...bring in the Athenians, the other the Lacedaemonians." Jow. ¿тгау«гва1 in loose connexion with Siar/iopuv ovffuv expresses the result. This verb...
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The Greek View of Life

Goldsworthy Lowes Dickinson - 1907 - 298 pages
...Peloponnesian war: " Not long afterwards the whole Hellenic world was in commotion; in every city the chiefe of the democracy and of the oligarchy were struggling,...and no desire to do so; but when they were at war and both sides could easily obtain allies to the hurt of their enemies and the advantage of themselves,...
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The Greek View of Life

Goldsworthy Lowes Dickinson - 1909 - 320 pages
...long afterwards the whole Hellenic world 1 Plat. Rep. VIII. 551.—Translation by Davies and Vaughan. was in commotion; in every city the chiefs of the...and no desire to do so ; but when they were at war and both sides could easily obtain allies to the hurt of their enemies and the advantage of themselves,...
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The Greek View of Life

Goldsworthy Lowes Dickinson - 1911 - 274 pages
...long afterwards the whole Hellenic world 1 Plat. Rep. VIII. 551.—Translation by Davies and Vaughan. was in commotion ; in every city the chiefs of the...and no desire to do so ; but when they were at war and both sides could easily obtain allies to the hurt of their enemies and the advantage of themselves,...
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