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English Pages 340 [333] Year 1982
THUCYDIDES Book
I
THUCYDIDES Book
I
Edited by
E. C. Marchant with new introduction
and bibliography by
Thomas Wiedemann
Published by Bristol Classical Press General Editor John H. Betts (text and notes reprinted by permission of Macmillan Education Ltd.)
Cover
illustration:
Athenian coin (drawing by
Printed
in
ISBN
First Reprinted
by
published
arrangement
Great
by
Bristol
Macmillan
Classical
University
«
ἃ
of of
Memorial
Queens Bristol
Text
B.C.
Britain
Macmillan
Department
ς
century
O-86292-027-2
with
Wills
of the fifth Jean Bees).
Notes:
& Co.
Ltd.
Education
(1905) Ltd.
(1982)
by
Press
Classics Bristol
Building
Road BS8 lRJ
Macmillan
Education
Essential Dates, Map, Introduction T.E.J. Wiedemann, 1982.
Ltd.
ἃ
Bibliography:
Printed and Bound by Short Run Press Ltd., Exeter, Devon
CONTENTS
Portrait
of
Preface
Thucydides
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Historical
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Imperialism
Rhetoric
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Purpose
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Thucydides from ἃ portrait bust, Roman copy of a fourth century B.C. Greek original, at Holkham Hall. [Drawing by Jean Bees].
vii
PREFACE
This edition, like its companions Thucydides II and IV, is intended primarily for University undergraduates and candidates taking Advanced Level School Certificate Examinations in Britain. It will also be useful to students who are approaching a book of Thucydides for the first time, or studying the Peloponnesian War from a more general, historical perspective. The text and notes are those of E.C. Marchant, originally published in 1905 and reprinted until recently by Macmillan Education Ltd., who kindly gave permission for their reproduction here. The new Introduction takes account of the questions which students today will want to ask about Thucydides' history, and of the present state of research. There is also a list of essential dates and an up-to-date bibliography, in which a primary criterion for inclusion has been accessibility to the non-academic English reader. The editors' gratitude is extended to Michael Jupe, Alyn Shipton and Brenda Stones, successive classics editors of Macmillan Education Ltd., for their co-operation. For the
new
Introduction
Professor
J.
Gould
and
Mrs
N.
Vincent
have kindly suggested improvements in content and style respectively. The map and illustrations are by Jean Bees and the layout by Amanda Barrett. '
.J.H.B./T.E.J.W. July 1982
ix
ESSENTIAL
ca.
DATES
End of war between Sparta and Tegea dominant over the Peloponnese.
550
leaves
Sparta
546
Cyrus defeats Croesus king over Ionian Greeks begins.
510
Spartan army under king Cleomenes of Peisistratids at Athens.
overthrows
508
Cleisthenes'
at
506
Athenians defeat Spartan and enian cleruchy at Chalcis.
Boeotian
Ionian Greeks revolt against ships to their support.
Persia;
500
-
494
490
483
480
- 479
478
ca.
465
ca.
464
462
- 457
-
'democratic'
Persian
raid
tory
Marathon).
at
of
on
Eretria
Lydia;
reforms
and
Athens
Themistocles builds new silver mines at
up Athenian Laureum.
Xerxes'
Greece.
invasion
of
Persian
rule
tyranny
Athens. army;
Ath-
Athenians
send
(Miltiades'
vic-
fleet,
financed
by
Spartans recall king Byzantium; Athenians League.
Pausanias after liberation of become leaders of the Delian
Cimon's victory of Thasos.
Persia
455
Spartans
over
involved
in
at
the
Messenian
Eurymedon;
revolt
revolt.
Full peasant democracy at Athens (Ephialtes and Pericles), replacing pro-Spartan leadership (Cimon); alliance with Argos; Athenians conquer Boeotia.
456
Athenians
454
Destruction of Athenian expedition in support anti-Persian revolt in Egypt; League treasury ferred from Delos to Athens.
of trans-
449/8
Athenian mination
ter-
447/6
Athenians
445
Thirty
occupy
Aegina.
victory at Salamis (Cyprus) of hostilities with Persia. ejected
years'
peace
from
Boeotia
between
and
Athens
leads
to
Megara. and
Sparta.
444
Athenians S. Italy.
found
'pan-Hellenic'
440/39
Revolt
Samos
and
435
- 433
Athenian
431
- 421
First part War').
of
alliances of
the
429
Death
of
428
First
eisphora
425
Capture of in tribute
424
Thucydides himself campaign; Brasidas
422
Deaths
of
Cleon
421
'Peace
of
Nicias'.
418
War
the
416
Athenians
415
- 413
in
with
Corcyra,
Leontini
Peloponnesian
War
etc.
('Archidamian
tax)
levied
at
Athens.
Spartans at Sphactería; massive increase assessment (not mentioned by Thucydides). in office as strategos; captures Amphipolis.
and
Brasidas
Peloponnese
before
between
Delium
Amphipolis.
Sparta
and
Argos.
Melos.
expedition.
Final
411
Oligarchy
410
Command
part
of at
of
the
Peloponnesian
War
('Decelean
War').
Athens
Athenian
Thucydides'
fleet
entrusted
to
Alcibiades;
text.
406
Athenian
victory
at
405
Spartans
destroy
last
394
Persian fleet under the command destroys the Peloponnesian navy
Cnidos.
Thurii,
Byzantium.
(property
conquer
413
of
at
Pericles.
Sicilian
end
colony
Restoration
Arginusae. Athenian
of
Athenian
fleet of at
at
the the
Aigospotamoi. Athenian Conon the battle of
hegemony
in
the
Aegean.
xi
INTRODUCTION
l.
The
Greek
Tradition
of
Historical
Writing
It may seem surprising at first sight that writers should take such ἃ prominent place in the syllabus of literature. Historians today are people who research
of history classical the past
with
to
more
or
less
rigorous
scholarly
methods
in
order
produce
interpretations of their sources which will be acceptable to everyone;.history is an academic discipline, a science. Even if we have abandoned the nineteenth-century idea that there is a set of 'laws of historical development' which it is the task of historians to try to discover, history is still a discipline which has little to do with literature. Many modern historians are, of course, extremely readable; but where events in the past are described in an overtly literary way, we feel we are faced with something quite different - a popular biography, or, if clearly fictitious, a historical romance. Thí$ clear distinction between history as an academic discipline and story-telling as a branch of literature did not exist in the ancient world. This is not surprising when the cycle of stories which all Greek children listened to at public festivals, and spent much of their time at school trying to learn off by heart, revolved around one particular event, the Trojan war, which, it was firmly believed, actually happened in the historical past. For people who had been brought up on Homer, any enquiry into the past (ἱστορία) was first and foremost a matter of narrating events similar to those about which Homer had composed his epic: the great deeds of heroes - largely how they slaughtered one another!. It has been suggested that Homer's Iliad must bear much of the blame for the extremely narrow subject matter treated by most historians in the ancient world (and indeed Western Europe since the Renaissance), who ignored religious, cultural, social and economic history and devoted themselves to politics and diplomacy, and especially the description of wars. It became a standard element in introducing a historical monograph telling the story of ἃ war to say that it was particularly hard-fought, disastrous, or heroic, and therefore deserved to be remembered. In
the
including
early
the
fifth-century
Athenians
and
B.C.,
the
various
Spartans,
Greek
came
to
communities,
be
involved
in hostilities with the Persian empire; the story of these events was told in a literary form by Herodotus of Halicarnassus, a city on the western coast of Asia Minor which had passed from the Persian to the Athenian sphere of influence as a result of these wars. In the first sentence of his history, Herodotus
1
This was of course the standard Beowulf or the Nibelungenlied.
subject-matter
of
'oral'
epic
-
cf.
xii
tells us why he thought the story worth repeating: 'to preserve the memory of the past, and so that great and extraordinary achievements, some done by Greeks and some by foreigners, should not come to be without glory; and particularly to show how the two peoples came to fight one another'. ἔργα μεγάλα τε xal ϑωμαστά - that was the subject matter of the historian. A historian even felt that he had to apologise if his material included insufficient wars and massacres (see e.g. Tacitus,
Annals
IV.32).
In what, then, lay the difference between history and other ways of telling stories, like epic? One obvious formal difference is that history is in prose. But the main distinguishing factor is what one might call the 'truth-principle': the historian must not only deal with real events (epic poets often do so too), but unlike the epic poet he ought, in theory, to avoid exaggeration or fabrication of any kind. This is an important contribution which historians have never ceased to consider of the essence of historical writing. It is probable that it originated among the Ionian Greeks who were conquered by Persia in 546 B.C., and forced to come to terms with the fact that their traditions about the past - like their religious beliefs conflicted with and often utterly contradicted those of other peoples within the Persian Empire, such as the Egyptians. Some Ionian writers tried to collect and systematise the myths, legends and genealogies associated with their cities; these 'logographers' - for all that Thucydides (1.20) dismisses the information they assembled as most unreliable - were highly critical towards Greek tradition and tried as best they could to reconstruct what seemed to them to be the 'truth'. The most important of them, Hecataeus of Miletus, began his work with the observation that 'the tales told by the Greeks are many, and they are ridiculous'. But a historian was not just giving an account of true events as they actually occurred. As Herodotus says in his preface, he also has to explain what led to these heroic con-
flicts:
δι΄
ἣν
αἰτίην
ἐπολέμησαν
ἀλλήλοισι.
Here
again
Greek
historians were developing an idea which occurs at the beginning of the Iliad: after stating its subject matter, the quarrel between Achilles and Agamemnon which led to such great slaughter, the poet says he will begin with the beginning of the quarrel,
and he asks which of the gods was responsible for ἄρ σφωε ϑεῶν ἔριδι ξυνέηκε μάχεσθαι; (rliad 1.8).
it: τίς τ΄ (It was
in fact Apollo, who punished Agamemnon for insulting his priest Chryses.) Herodotus too feels he has to account for the origins of his war. He gives his readers a long series of connected stories to explain why Persians ended up fighting Greeks. In fact he has several different levels of explanation. Firstly there is a series of political events which forms a coherent chain: the Persians invaded Greece because the Athenians had sent some ships in support of a revolt by the Ionian Greeks against Persia; and so Herodotus goes back in history to explain that the Persians ruled the Ionian Greeks because they had
xiii
annexed
the
Lydian us
empire;
by
telling Herodotus
also
of
political
events,
dotes: for a conquest
about
the adds
in
turn
Lydians many
very
that
and
stories
often
requires
how
they
which
personal
are
or
him
to
conquered outside
romantic
example, that the Persians were persuaded of Greece by a Greek physician at Darius'
begin Ionia.
this
chain
anecto plan court called
Democedes who wished to return to his own city of Croton (III.129 ff.). Such stories were obviously very entertaining, and many later
historians
little
else
in
who
wrote
their
largely
works.
In
to
the
entertain
case
of
some
included
very
'rhetorical'
Greek historians of the Hellenistic and Roman periods, difficult to distinguish between history and romantic
it is fiction.
But in addition Herodotus imposed on particular sets of actions an explanatory scheme in terms of supernatural punishment of those human beings who rise above their proper
station:
they
evoke
the
envy
(φϑόνος)
and
anger
(νέμεσις)
of
the gods, who destroy them. Particular actions may be mentioned by Herodotus - king Xerxes throws golden chains into the Hellespont when rough seas prevent his army from crossing from Asia into Europe; this is a direct insult to the god of the sea (VII.35). But often this offence against the proper order of the universe consists in a general situation rather than particular crimes: Cyrus crosses the river Araxes and is destroyed for his presumption in going further than a human being should (1.204.2); but no specific case of insolence to the gods is mentioned. Because Polycrates, tyrant of Samos,
is
more
powerful
is nothing 43).
he
and
can
do
more to
fortunate escape
the
than anger
a of
man the
should gods
be,
there
(III.39
-
In trying (nct always successfully) to impose this pattern of explanation on events, Herodotus was applying an important principge of historical analysis - that the 'cause' of an event need not be another specific event, but a general situation or state of mind on the part of a person or community, which provokes reactions from others. What the historian does
is
select
specific
events
or
actions
which
illustrate
the
gen-
eral situation. The specific events which Herodotus selects are significant not so much in their own right, but because they are suitable examples of the tendency towards arrogance
which
it
is
the
function.of
gods
to
check.
In
other
words,
the historian is not someone who lists all the empirical historical 'facts' he can find; he has a pattern of explanation, and selects those facts which seem to him the most suitable symptoms or illustrations of that pattern. Herodotus himself may not have been entirely aware of the distinction between 'hidden' explanations and their easily identifiable symptoms. But the value of this distinction for the development of a historical method is enormous; it allows us to see that, for example, the view that the first world war was 'caused' by the assassination of the Archduke Franz Ferdinand at
χὶν
Sarajevo does not preclude the view that it was also the culmination of decades of European imperialism. It was Thucydides who noticed the importance of the distinction, and he virtually arranged hís account of the causes of the war between Athens and Sparta from 431 - 404 B.C. around it. This systenatic analysis of causes makes the first book of Thucydides as stimulating as any modern account of the origins of a war?.
in
the
Thucydides
has
Herodotus;
indeed
idea
of
Herodotus. and
no
he
including (For
Pausanias,
particular
time
τὸ
the
see
for
at
the
one
'romantic'
point
μυϑῶδες,
and
'Herodotean'
p.xli
individuals
ff.
this
as
the
cause
well
of
found
rejects
refer
to
Themistocles
Personal
ignored;
of
explicitly
may
treatment
below.)
are
type
(1.22.4)
details
history
about
progresses,
individual commanders and politicians do tend to play a greater role - but that may simply be ἃ reflection of an actual historical development: as both Spartan and Athenian armies campaigned away from the control of their home governments, their generals began to have a wider area in which they were forced
to
exercise
In
the
their
first
ist';
unlike
own
books
initiative
Thucydides
Hecataeus
and
is
-
as
during
certainly
Herodotus,
he
the very
does
Sicilian much
not
a
campaign.
‘rational-
simply
repeat
the stories told him by his informants - he never gives us alternative versions, but only tells us what he thinks is the better illustration of his own interpretation; and he never mentions his sources. His primary interest is in what we might call 'sociological' factors, in particular the importance of finance and naval power. No-one before him had thought of analysing fight-
ing
in
terms
of
concepts
orary of Thucydides, who is traditionally
Oligarch', same
analyses
principles.
such
as
these.
an anti-democratic given the curious
Athenian Some
society
modern
in
scholars
theory
and
virtually
to
prove
none
or
about
disprove.
There
The division of the work into eight books appears to be due to Hellenistic critics, in nine and thirteen books.
3
Thucydides
tell
us
general
424
B.C.,
little
Amphivolis in Thrace, all the 'information'
was
more
held
one who
Thucydides?,
?
in
terms have
Thucydides and 'the Old Oligarch' were since we have no evidence at all about was,
Strangely,
about
is
himself
responsible
of
for
contemp-
exactly
even
argued
the that
and the same; but 'the Old Oligarch' this
however
was who
a
political pamphleteer sobriquet of 'the Old
is
a
a
difficult
simpler
not Thucydides' own - it also produced editions
than
the
and spent the next twenty in ancient biographies of
that
he
Athenian
was
elected
loss
of
years in exile. Almost him is based on (mis-) interpretations of the text itself. Nevertheless there are indications that he had connections through his father Olorus with the Thracian nobility, and also with the Philaids, a powerful Athenian family whose members included Miltiades, the victor of Marathon, Pericles' opponent Cimon, and Cimon's son Lacedaemonius, who is mentioned by Thucydides (1.45.2). For various theories as to the identity of 'the Old Oligarch' see M. Treu in Pauly-Wissowa, Realencyclopadie, IX A 2 (1967) 1959 ff.
ΧΝν
alternative. In the late fifth century there were several men who for the first time thought about their society in terms of its financial and maritime power, because for the first time in Greek experience they were faced with the existence of an empire which was founded on these two factors.
2.
Athenian
Imperialism
The Athenian Empire had arisen as a direct result of the role of Athens, and in particular her navy, in the war against the Persian invaders in 480 - 479 B.C. Previously the most powerful Greek states had been the twin Dorian communities of Argos and Sparta. Spartan power was based on the fact that the citizen body, which called itself the ὅμοιοι (equals), controlled a very much larger population of serfs, the 'helots'. Since the citizens could live off the produce of these serfs, they could all devote the whole of their time to civic activities and in particular to military training; thus in spite of their relatively small numbers (there were only about 10,000 homoioi at the time of the Persian wars) they turned themselves into the most efficient military machine in Greece. But the fact that Sparta was intensely militaristic did not mean that it was also expansionist. Spartans did not like to go on campaigns outside the Peloponnese. One reason for this was fear of a helot uprising; for unlike slaves, who formed part of the households of free citizens, helots were the property of the Spartan state as a whole, and continued to live in communities of their own. There was thus always a possibility that as soon as the Spartan army was outside Laconia, the helots would rebel. There were in fact several serious helot revolts in Laconia and Messenia during the fifth century B.C. (see Thucydides I.101). There was also another reason why Spartans did not like long military campaigns. Sparta was even more totalitarian than most Greek communities; the homoioi were loathe to tolerate any citizen who was more powerful than his peer-group. Clearly a man who commanded a Spartan expedition abroad would, if the expedition were successful, win himself an exceptional amount of prestige and political influence with the
commanders
of
Sparta's
allies,
in
addition
to
the
the
material
rewards of successful warfare. This situation was complicated by the fact that the Spartans had hereditary military commanders, their two kings. The Spartans were always afraid that one of these two kings might obtain more influence than was proper as a result of a military campaign - in fact, that he might make himself a tyrant. Spartan history is full of brilliant military commanders who were persecuted by their own people because they were too successful: e.g. king Cleomenes (see Herodotus V.39 ff.); the regent Pausanias (Thucydides I.131-4); or the admiral Lysander after the end of the Peloponnesian War. Four other Spartan kings were deposed between 491 and 394 B.C.
were
Nevertheless there was a period of Spartan prepared to use their military expertise
history when they for expeditions
xvi
beyond their own borders. A series of such campaigns during the second half of the sixth century led to three major results. Sparta permanently replaced Argos as the most powerful state in Greece; the defeat of Tegea in Arcadia led to a system of unequal alliances through which Sparta came to be recognised as the leader of much of the Peloponnese; and the deposition of tyrants in Sicyon, Corinth and elsewhere gave Sparta the reputation of being the protagonist of ἃ 'free', republican form of government. Thus when in 510 B.C. certain aristocratic families at Athens wished to overthrow the local tyrants, the sons of Peisistratus, they naturally turned to Sparta, and it was a Spartan army under king Cleomenes that freed Athens from tyranny. The Athenian families which had called in Cleomenes soon quarrelled among themselves, and those supported by Sparta were in fact defeated; but Sparta continued to be recognised as the most powerful state in Greece, and the Athenians appealed to her for assistance in repulsing the Persian expedition sent by Darius in 490 B.C., and were quite prepared to accept Spartan leadership when Xerxes decided to conquer Greece in 480 B.C. After the Persians had been defeated by the Greeks at Salamis in 480 and Plataea in 479 B.C., there was a strong feelshould they that allies Greek of the some of part the on ing put an end to Persian control over all the Greek-speaking cities on the eastern side of the Aegean. The Spartans, whose king Leotychidas commanded the allied fleet, had reservations,
but
the
Greeks
did
sail
to
Ionia,
defeated
the
Persian fleet at the battle of Mycale and admitted the Aegean islanders to their alliance (see Herodotus IX.106). In the following year the Greek fleet was commanded by the Spartan regent Pausanias; he expelled the Persians from Cyprus and then attacked Byzantium, which controlled (as it still does) the principle crossing from Asia to Europe. When the Persian garrison was expelled, Pausanias was hailed by the population as the liberator and benefactor of their city. This was exactly what the Spartan homoioi did not like to see happening to any of their officers, and they immediately summoned him back to Sparta to stand trial for treason. Although Thucydides mentions another Spartan commander, Dorcis, who was sent out the following year, the Spartans seem to have been as glad to be rid of involvement in overseas adventures as the other Greeks were to be rid of Spartan commanders (see Thucydides I.94f.). For practical purposes those Greek states which to carry on the war against Persia now had to find leader, and after the brave role she had played at
proposed another Salamis
Athens
in
was
the
obvious
choice.
Some
years
before,
483
B.C.,
Themistocles had managed to persuade the Athenians to allocate the income from newly-discovered silver deposits at Laureum to the upkeep of a navy, and thus the Athenians happened to have one of the largest fleets in Greece during these crucial years. Representatives of the allied states
xvii
met at the temple of in the autumn of 478 agreement, but there
Apollo on the island of B.C.; we do not know the is no reason to suppose
resume
is
(I.96
-
97.1)
misleading.
States
Delos, probably exact terms of their that Thucydides'
which
were
unable
or unwilling to provide ships for the war-effort were to pay a contribution to be kept in Apollo's temple at Delos under the supervision of a committee of ten Athenians; there were obvious advantages if responsibility lay with just one particular state and, clearly, no-one was envisaging that there might come a day when the Athenians would use this fund to control unwilling subjects. But this was exactly what did happen, and it seems to have happened quite soon. As soon as 477 or 476 B.C., the Athenians attacked Carystus, at the southern end of Euboea, and forced the city to join the Delian League. Our only source for this operation is Thucydides (1.98.3), and he does not tell us whether it was purely Athenian or involved the other allies as well. Carystus had been a Persian base against Attica in 480 B.C., and it is at least possible that the Athenians wished to eliminate potential Persian supporters (they had already subjugated the strategically important city of Eion at the mouth of the river Strymon in Thrace, which the Persians had controlled). Some years later the Athenians moved against Naxos: Thucydides says explicitly that 'this was the first city to be enslaved in contravention
of the terms of the League' -noórtn τε αὕτη παρὰ τὸ μαϑεστηκὸς ἐδουλῶϑη. Again, we do
πόλις ξυμμαχὶς not know the context,
and it has been argued that what the Athenians suppressed was a pro-Persian conspiracy among the Naxian aristocracy. The next case of Athenian intervention against a Greek state, Thasos, in about 465/3 B.C., seems to have been a purely private dispute between the two states about who was to control the Thracian coast with its important mineral wealth. Greek cities had been fighting each other because of rivalries of this kind for centuries, and there was nothing new about Athens trying to eliminate the influence of Thasos. That had nothing to do with the Persian threat, nor with loyalty to the Delian League. What was new was that once they had defeated Thasos, and all the other states, the Athenians now had a mechanism through which they could perpetuate their control - the alliance, which bound all League members to Athens. The Athenians by themselves would hardly have had the human or financial resources to control effectively a hostile state like Thasos, except rather drastically by slaughtering the inhabitants; but paradoxically they could control the whole of the Aegean by using the alliance to ensure that all the member states continued to obey the same rules. They
there ships,
The
were
had and
helped
been those
two
in
this
categories
who
money-contribution
by
the
of
provided
or
φόρος
a
fact
allies
that
-
from
those
money-contribution
(tribute),
was
by the Athenians to pay themselves to fit out which might often actually be manned by hired
the
who in
start
provided instead.
fact
used
extra ships rowers from
xviii
allied cities; thus the allies were both paying for and manning an Athenian fleet which was substantially larger than the one the Athenians would have been able to provide from their own income and manpower. The Athenian naval empire, financed by phoros, was therefore something quite unprecedented, and it is hardly surprising that other Greek states, and in particular the Spartans, should soon have come to see it as a threat. This was particularly so during the 450's B.C., when the proSpartan leaders at Athens had been removed from power by
the
so-called
‘radical
democrats’,
Ephialtes
and
Pericles,
and for some years overseas expeditions to the Black Sea, Cyprus and Egypt were combined with a bid for control of a land empire in Boeotia and the Megarid." Hostilities lasted for several years without the Spartans making much headway; but in 447 B.C. the Athenian hoplite army was heavily defeated at Coronea in Boeotia. In the following year the Spartans made a thirty-years' peace-treaty with the Athenians, who lost their control over the states on the mainland but retained the Delian League. It was this peace agreement which the Spartans and their allies revoked in 431 B.C. Why were the Athenian peasant farmers prepared to go and fight to expand their empire in places like Cyprus and Egypt, and later in Sicily? It used to be suggested that Athenian military expansion was advocated by groups of merchants and industrialists who needed markets for their products, much as British industrialists supported the imperialism of Sir Charles Dilke or Joseph Chamberlain in the nineteenth century.? Unfortunately, there is no
evidence
at
all
for
Athenian/Corinthian
trade
rivalry;
Athenian vases, for example, had already replaced Corinthian products in the western Mediterranean by the mid-sixth century B.C.; so the Athenian attempt to conquer Sicily in 415/413 cannot have been to take control of markets away from the Corinthians. Even if there had been a group of powerful industrialists at Athens (and we must remember that in all ancient societies - and right up to the industrial revolution - manufacturing was of very minor importance compared to agriculture), these men would have been 'metics', non-citizen resident aliens, who would have been quite unable to pressurise —— c
"
An indication of the scale of Athenian military operations overseas during these years is provided by a famous inscription (Meiggs & Lewis
No. 33) giving the names of 177 Athenians from tribal units, all of whom died in the fighting (460 or 459 B.C.). This was the theory put Mythistoricus (1907).
forward
by
Francis
just one of the ten of one single year
Cornford
in
his
Thucydides
c]
xix
the
self-sufficient
(popular assembly) adventures.
peasant and
voted
farmers to
risk
who
attended
their
own
tne lives
EuuANcıa on
military
If
there was indeed an economic reason why Athenian peasants were imperialists, it was that in the ancient world (as in many 'developing' states today) political power was seen to be one of the most effective ways to acquire wealth. To us, it seems highly improper that a man with political responsibility should expect to be given presents, or bribes, by those who need to make use of his services. But the ancients were quite clear about what was and what was not morally acceptable: to act against the best interests of one's polis as a result of a gift was bribery, but to be given a gift as a sign of gratitude by a social inferior for having done him a favour was something to be proud of. After all, what was tribute if not an institutionalised form of gift-giving by inferiors to superiors®? The possession of empire therefore enormously increased the opportunities of Athenian officials for acquiring wealth. In any dispute amongst themselves, subject states would now turn to the Athenians to judge between them. Individual Athenians would no doubt receive bribes and presents from these ambassadors, and the city as a whole would receive a thank-offering from whichever party considered it had obtained satisfaction. Perhaps the Athenians would have to send a commission to investigate the dispute; in which case they would be lavishly entertained and be given more gifts. There were other, permanent, commissions, e.g. inspecting the proper payment of tribute, or making sure that all coinage minted within the empire accorded with Athenian specifications. The ancient account of the Constitution of Athens attributed to Aristotle says that the empire created 700 extra ad-
ministrative
offices
('A9nvacov
Πολιτεία
24.3
-
assuming
that
the
text is sound). More direct sources of wealth for Athenian citizens were the cleruchies - originally garrison colonies on land in subject states which had been confiscated and was apportioned to poorer Athenians; but in the later fifth
century,
the
μληροῦχοι
(allotment-holders)
seem
to
have
spent more and more of their time, and of the income from their allotments, at Athens, where they continued to exercise full civic rights. At the level of the community as a whole, there was the fact that after the cessation of hostilities against the Persians in 449 B.C., the Athenians decided that they would use the tribute from their allies to rebuild the temples on the Acropolis which the Persians had destroyed. The fact that in democratic Athens the quota of one-sixtieth of the tribute which each year was set aside for the goddess Athena (to whose temple at Athens the tribute was moved from Delos in 454 B.C.) had to be inscribed on a marble stele set up on the Acropolis for all to see, would have brought to everyone's 6
It has only been in the last couple of centuries that the American and French disciples of Locke have developed the notion that taxes are payment for services rendered to the taxpayer by the government, rather than gifts symbolising submission to a superior.
ΧΧ
attention at Athens
the and
Because
direct connection between rising the control of the empire.
Athens
had
since
4627}
B.C.
been
living
a
standards
community
in
which
every peasant wealthy enough to provide himself with hoplite armour had had equal access to even the highest offices of state, the material benefits of the empire really did go to all the men who had to do the actual fighting. In a democracy in which office-holders were chosen by lot, every citizen had a chance of political office; and office-holding meant wealth. As Athenian power increased, so the wealth coming into Athens increased. One important result of this was political stability. For half a century up to 411 B.C., Athens was free of stasis, the strife between rich and poor that was so typical of Greek cities, and which Thucydides
analyses
in
such
a
frightening
way
(IIT.8BO
-
82).
Athens
was a democracy, and one would have expected the wealthiest citizens to object to having to share power with ordinary peasants. But the aristocratic γένη (clans) were prepared to tolerate this so long as the sum total of prestige and
wealth
continued
to
increase
as
a
result
of
an
expanding
empire. Better to share control of ἃ vast empire with one's humbler fellow-citizens than to have sole control over an impoverished Attica. But of course this only made sense if the empire was expanding - if glory could be won by leading new campaigns to distant lands. The moment the democracy could no longer guarantee expansion, it lost the whole-hearted consent of the wealthy: after the destruction of the Sicilian expedition in 413 B.C., there were widespread defections amongst
Athens'
subjects,
democracy.
3.
and
in
Imperialism
411 and
the
oligarchs
democracy
went
overthrew
the
hand-in-hand.
Rhetoric
The
unprecedented
phenomenon
of
Athenian
imperialism
did not merely require new attitudes towards financial administration and naval technology. It also led to the development of rhetorical theory. The need to explain one's point of view clearly and persuasively has traditionally been associated with democratic institutions like the ecclesia or the popular courts. The Greeks themselves believed that the first professional teachers of rhetoric, Corax and his pupil Tisias, developed their techniques as the result of an enormous increase in litigation following the establishment of a democracy at Syracuse in 466 B.C. The (not entirely correct) notion that rhetoric can only flourish in a republic became a standard motif in antiquity, and since. At Athens too the inauguration of a democratic regime meant that the ruling families had to adopt new techniques in order to remain respected and influential; many of Plato's dialogues (e.g. the Protagoras) show how keen young men of wealthy families were to learn from professional teachers of rhetoric, the Sophists,
xxi
how
to
there
succeed was
in
public
life
another
reason
why
-
the
πολιτική
statesmen
at
τέχνη.
Athens
But
had
a
par-
ticular interest in developing the ability to think critically and express their thoughts persuasively. The Athenian Empire presented them with many problems for which no straightforward solutions were prescribed by ancestral tradition. The entirely novel administrative methods of the Delian League meant that Athenian politicians could not refer to the authority of precedent; they had to think through for themselves the implícations of, for example, changes in the cost of the upkeep of the allied fleet, or of increasing the rate of tribute, and once they were clear in their own minds what it was they wanted, they had to explain their innovations to the peasant citizens who sat on the βουλή (executive council) and constituted the demos. And apart
from
the
novel
problems
arising
from
the
fact
that
their
naval empire was a new development, the Athenians also had to come to terms with the fact that they had more power over other people than ever before. In 427 B.C., for example, the ecclesia was faced with the question of what to do about the city of Mytilene, which had been recaptured after revolting against them (Thucydides tells the story in book III); there was no clear precedent handed down by ancestral tradition, so the only thing that could be done was for different speakers to lay alternative proposals before the demos - and try to persuade the demos that their proposal was better. (In the end the Athenians decided not to massacre the entire population of Mytilene, but merely the wealthiest thousand or So.) The development of rhetoric was therefore an essential instrument for the smooth running of an empire ruled by a democracy. And it is hardly surprising that none of the great literary figures active in Athens in this period remained uninfluenced by these new techniques. The most obvious sign of this is the appearance of formally structured speeches in tragedy, in comedy, and in history. Very often these speeches appear in pairs, like the argument in Aristophanes' Clouds between the proponents of old and new ideas of education, or between Jason and Medea in Euripides' Medea 465 ff. (431 B.C.) Generally we find that the second speech of the pair picks up
point
by
point
the
assertions
made
in
the
first,
and
the
literary
convention is that it is normally the last speech which has the better arguments (ἃ convention which is no doubt founded on the reality that it is always easier to be persuaded by the arguments of the man to whom one has been listening last). The literary representation of conflicts between opposing arguments can be in the form of a dialogue as well as set speeches - for example the discussion between Creon and Haemon in Sophocles' Antigone (640 ff.); and in Thucydides there is the famous ‘Melian Dialogue' (V.85 - 113), which rehearses much the same arguments about justice and the right of the stronger as are put into the mouth of Thrasymachus in the first book of Plato's Republic.
xxii
This
convention
of
the
ἀγών
(contest)
between
speakers
with
opposing views is merely an example in fifth-century literature of the wider development of antitheses. The Greek language was naturally prone to structuring ideas in terms of polar
opposites
because
it
possessed
words
like
μέν
and
δέ;
but
that
on its own does not explain the enormous popularity of antitheses in the literature of fifth century Athens. Again the most important reason is perhaps the need to explain novel ideas clearly to a mass audience. As Aristotle pointed out (Rhetoric 1410a 20 ff.), people like antitheses because they often find it easier to understand a thing when they are told what its opposite is, particularly when the two contraries are placed side by side. There is of course a danger that for the sake of stylistic balance antitheses may be thought up which are unreal
and misleading, like the sophistic contrast between justice (τὸ δίκαιον) and expediency (τὸ ξυμφέρον), which appears so frequently in Thucydides' speeches - for example in the debate about how to punish the people of Mytilene for having revolted against Athens (III. 37 - 48); the Corinthians try to show how vacuous this distinction is in their speech against Athens (see I.42). Nevertheless this way of structuring arguments was extremely useful in practice, and it became an important source for the development of formal logic. Teachers of rhetoric produced handbooks in which antithetical arguments were categorised and listed (e.g. the socalled Dissoi Logoi, dealing with the meaning and use of pairs
of
words
like
Óya9óv/xaxóv,
xaAóv/atoxoóv,
6(xavov/A&6vxov).
Given this general intellectual climate, we should not be surprised to find that Thucydides often expounds the policies
of
states
and
individuals
in
formal
set
speeches,
instead
of
merely giving a summary in reported speech; though, in fact, he frequently does that too, as in his detailed report of the contents of the Corcyreans' speech at Corinth (1.28). ΝΟΣ should we be surprised that these speeches often come in pairs, with the second speech replying to points raised in the first, as in the speech of the Corinthians (1.37 ff.) where they answer the arguments of the Corcyrean delegation to Athens: since they speak last, convention leads us to expect their arguments to be superior, and that may well have been Thucydides' view, but the majority of Athenians was not convinced. Homer had already made use of speeches as a literary so had Herodotus, and although, in many of his speeches, rhetorical 'technique' used to persuade the audience is
series
of
παραδείγματα
(precedents,
Latin
exempla),
some
device; the only a long
are
well-argued and clearly influenced by the ideas of the Sophists - e.g. III.80 ff., speeches in which three Persian noblemen advocate democracy, aristocracy and monarchy respectively. The fact that Herodotus explicitly asserts that such a discussion actually took place shows that he was aware that his audience might assume that he had invented the whole thing because the literary form of his account is completely that of a Greek agon. If we take Herodotus' assurance seriously, we must assume that dressing up these speeches in ideas and forms from contemp-
xxiii
orary
Greek
torian's view,
in
too;
the
he it
are
on
is
not
did
not
in
principle'.
explains
chapter
cations;
which
oratory
'truth
his
method
clear
put
opinion
seems
attitude
(1.22).
from
into
his
That
towards
These
those
direct
to
the
Thucydides'
been
formal,
speeches
speeches
speech,
undermine
have
set
were
Thucydides
that
he
did
hisspeeches
not
fabri-
summarises
know
roughly
what was said at many important conferences and debates. But what he has done is select certain occasions as particularly appropriate for a detailed analysis of the policies and motives, hopes and as fears, of particular states or individuals; and to give as pure, 'ideal' an impression as possible of these policies, he has dressed them up in the language his contemporaries thought most appropriate - that of the rhetoricians. It has been argued that because many of the most important teachers of rhetorical techniques, such as Gorgias of Leontini, did not come to Athens until well after 431 B.C., Thucydides is being anachronistic when he puts these figures of speech into the mouths of
speakers
in
the
43O's
B.C.
But
there
is
no
doubt
that
many
of
these rhetorical tricks, especially the antithesis, were being used much earlier than that; and in any case this would not prove that Thucydides invented the content of the speeches he reproduces. Nor does Thucydides' sophisticated use of rhetorical techniques prove that the speeches were insertions added later to the narrative text.
4.
The
Arrangement
of
Material
in
Book
I
These, then, were some of the constituents of Thucydides' cultural environment which influenced his selection and arrangement of material when he came to write up his narrative of the war which began in 431 B.C.: a tradition of storytelling about wars, which went back beyond Herodotus to the
Iliad;
the
critical
collection
of
'facts'
undertaken
by
Ionian
logographers; the tendency of fifth century Greeks to analyse situations in terms of clear, distinct 'types', normally arranged as pairs of opposites; and the fact that in democratic Athens policy had to be expounded in public speeches. There were some further could present his account, every writer in antiquity;
roll
from
which
his
readers
limitations on the way Thucydides material limitations which affected in particular, the form of the papyrus
would
read
out
the
text
he
wrote.
With a codex (a book made up of pages) one can refer backwards and forwards with comparative ease; if the reader has forgotten what was said a couple of pages earlier, there is no problem about looking up the passage in question. And a writer who wishes to provide information which he feels supports his argument but would break up his line of thought can relegate this to a footnote or an appendix at the end of his book. But when a writer uses a papyrus roll instead of a codex, he has
to in
include all the his text. When
necessary information at the relevant point he has finished his digression or 'excursus',
χχὶν
he then has to remind his readers what it was that he was saying before. Most ancient writers were not very conscious of the problems caused by these continual interruptions of their line of thought, because this limitation imposed by the form of the papyrus roll was masked by the very similar limitations caused because literary works were normally broadcast orally, perhaps before an invited audience, or in the agora to anyone who cared to listen. In the Hellenistic and Roman period special buildings, odeia, were erected for such recitations. Such an oral recitation required an order of treating events very similar to that which teachers of rhetoric recommended for speeches. Whether composed as a speech or written on a papyrus-roll, the account could only be 'unravelled' in one direction: there was no choice but to begin at the beginning, and to stop whenever new information was introduced to tell the audience all about it in a digression before going on with the main narrative. Thucydides in fact states explicitly that he is not writing a recitation to please an audience (1.22.4), but a work of reference of permanent value. This is another respect in which his work is almost unique in antíquity, and it has been suggested that he thought of himself as a collector of data like the early medical scientists of the school of Hippocrates at Cos’. Nevertheless he does in fact use literary forms appropriate to ἃ public recitation - so much so that it has been suggested that his first book is built up ín accordance with the
rhetorical
rules
introductory appeal to the interest and
how the
about
the
form
of
speeches:
there
is
an
(πρόλογος or TTPOOLLULOV, Latin prooemium) sympathy of the audience (Thucydides states
important his theme is task of assembling the
in chapters 1 - 19, and how difficult evidence was in 20- 22) and he apologises
in advance for the lack of 'entertainment value' (22.4). The account of the causes of the war, Corcyra, Potidea and fear of imperialism, fulfil the same function of providing background information as the διηγήσις (Latin narratio) in a speech. The πρόϑεσις (Latin argumentatio) begins with book II, the treatment of the war itself. Because Thucydides did not for some reason complete his history, there is no ἐπίλογος (Latin peroratio) as there would be in a speech, but the two books dealing with the Sicilian expedition, which form a finished account in themselves (and may well have been published separately by Thucydides) do end with a short epilogue (VII.87.5 f.). It is not necessary to suppose that Thucydides was consciously trying to apply rhetorical rules; the similarity may rather be that Thucydides, like the sophists, was trying to say what he had to say in the
most
sensible
possible
way.
Rhetoric
entirely artificial but an attempt way to put across an argument.
to
after codify
all the
is
not
most
something effective
? This theory is largely based on Thucydides' obvious interest in describing the symptoms as well as the social and moral effect of the great plague which struck Athens in 430 B.C. (II.47 ff.).
XXV
The
Purpose
of
the
'Archaeology'
Thucydides begins at the beginning, by telling us what it is that he proposes to write about: 'the war Peloponnesians and Athenians, as they fought against
-
τὸν
πόλεμον
τῶν
Πελοποννησίων
xal
'A89nvatov,
ὡς
exactly of the each other'
ἐπολέμησαν
πρὸς ἀλλήλους. The second half of that sentence suggests that he was at great pains to define his subject very carefully indeed. This would have been extremely important sínce in antiquity a potential reader could not 'unravel' the whole of a scroll the way we can leaf through a book before deciding whether it is worth reading; he had to know what was in it at once. Thucydides intended his history to be about the subject he mentions so precisely in his first sentence: the war. He does not promise to tell us about the history of the Athenian Empire, or about Athenian economic or social affairs, or about domestic party politics, or diplomatic relations with Persia, and we are not entitled to be disappointed if we find that he gives no systematic account of these subjects. He does promise to tell us about warfare, and about this specific war between Athenians and Peloponnesians: and any information about these other topics, about which twentieth century readers would so dearly wish to have more information, is given only when it is relevant to an understanding of the course of the war. It may of couse be that Thucydides made mistakes when he decided what was relevant and what was not (in particular he may well have underestimated the importance of Persian policy during the first part of the war), but we cannot criticise him if his account of the fifty years between 480 and 431 B.C. (the 'Pentecontaetia') is insufficiently detailed, or if he ignores aspects of Athenian financial policy like the increase
in
tribute
in
425/4
B.C.;
about these things, it is help us to understand the Having why it is by saying
ἔργα
if
he
only war.
does because
give he
us
any
thinks
information this
will
stated his subject, Thucydides goes on to tell us worth reading about. Just as Herodotus had begun that the things he was going to talk about were
μεγάλα
τε
xal
9ouactá,
so
Thucydides
says
that
right
from the beginning he expected this war to be a great one, 'more worthy of consideration than any previous war, the greatest disturbance ever to have affected the Greek world, and indeed one might almost say humanity as a whole'. This is a large claim and he feels he has to justify it - particularly to an audience brought up to worship the Iliad. He does this in a survey of earlier Greek history, the so-called 'Archaeology'. After just two sentences, Thucydides has been forced to give us his first digression, ἃ digression which already worried commentators in antiquity - like the Augustan critic Dionysius of Halicarnassus, who thought that having an excursus at such an early point of one's narrative broke the rules of rhetorical effectiveness (On Thucydides 19).
-
xxvi
In fact the digression is there validate Thucydides' argument. It
a
list
of
empirical
'facts'
which
because it is does this not
support
his
necessary by giving
thesis
to
(for
Thucydides is quite aware of how unreliable his evidence about the distant past was) but by postulating a theory about the way Greek society developed which implies that in earlier ages the Greeks could never have had the resources to fight major
wars.
Thus
the
'Archaeology'
is
not
ἃ
list
of
major
events
in bronze age and archaic Greek history: it is an analysis of the economic weaknesses of early Greece, with illustrative examples. At first, continual migrations meant that people saw no reason for producing any surplus. Political instability had the same effect in more fertile areas. Nor did Greece have sufficient political unity to use any such surplus to mount a major war; here Thucydides uses philological arguments to show that even at the time of the Trojan war, Greeks did not yet see themselves as a single people. The next factor he wishes to discuss is sea-power: without experience of sea-faring, the Greeks could.never have mounted the expedition to Troy. He suggests that the development of maritime power was due to Minos, and that it was a measure
taken
against
piracy
in
order
to
secure
the
revenues
of
the
empire. This leads to a discussion of piracy and of brigandage in general, once extremely common and even socially acceptable occupations. Thucydides notes that there was a time when every-
one
had
to
carry
arms
to
defend
themselves
from
bandits.
This
leads him to make some remarks on the history of costume which are perhaps not entirely essential to his argument, namely that after it was no longer necessary to carry weapons, there was a period when the rich dressed very luxuriously; after that more simple tastes in clothing prevailed, as in Thucydides' own time. The Spartans were the first, he says, to abandon luxury (presumably when the homoioi adopted their egalitarian lifestyle), rich Athenians only very recently (with the development of the democracy in the first half of the fifth century). It was Minos who took the first steps to suppress piracy and brigandage, and this allowed coastal settlements to develop trade, build up their financial resources and defend themselves with city-walls. Thucydides then integrates the story of the Trojan war into his argument by showing how it illustrates his theory of the gradual accumulation of capital. Agamemnon's power did not originate in oaths of obedience which all the Greek chieftains, as suitors of Helen, had sworn to her father Tyndareus; but rather in his possession of pre-eminent wealth, the nucleus of which had been brought from Asia by his ancestor Pelops. With this wealth Agamemnon was able to finance a navy. (Thucydides says that Homer's statement that he ruled many
islands
implies
that
he
must
have
had
a
navy
to
control
them.)
Nevertheless, considering that the whole of Greece was involved, the army which went to Troy was not very large; Thucydides analyses Homer's statistics on the number of ships
xxvii
and the size of their crews: much shortage of manpower as
οὐχ
hà ó6Avyav8Bponta
τοσοῦτον
'the reason shortage of
ὅσον
for this was not so capital resources' -
ἡ ἀχρηματία
(1.11.1).
To
prove this assertion, Thucydides points to the fact that Agamemnon had to keep sending some of his men off on foraging expeditions, thus diminishing the military effectiveness of the expedition. Even after the Trojan war, the factors he had mentioned as preventing the accumulation of capital (migrations and political instability) continued for centuries. But revenues improved hand in hand with the development of tyranny and of sea-power. Thucydides gives a list of the major maritime empires of the
past;
but
he
notes
that
none
of
them
possessed
a
fleet
as
powerful as contemporary states, because of technological developments such as the invention of the trireme. Nevertheless, these navies were important, and the basis of powerful empires: he stresses that warfare on land never led to the acquisition of a stable empire, even in the single case of ἃ war which did involve a large number of Greek states, that between Chalcis and Eretria (the so-called 'Lelantine War'). But these naval empires encountered a number of obstacles: one was the Persian conquest of Ionia, the other the rise of tyranny, which he had already mentioned. Tyrants were interested only in their own families, and hence never achieved anything worth writing about (he makes an exception of the Sicilian tyrants, who had successfully fought against the Etruscans and Carthaginians) .° Tyranny was in fact suppressed especially by the Spartans; soon after came the Persian wars, and the subsequent division of Greece into an Athenian and a Spartan alliance. Thucydides suggests that the long period of rivalry between the two alliances meant that both were at a peak of military effectiveness in 431 B.C. He also notes that because Athens forced most of her allies to pay a contribution in money, her private resources were considerably larger than they would otherwise have been. Sparta on the other hand collected no tribute: later in book I, there are more references to her inability to match Athens in this respect. There Thucydides’ analysis of the concentration of financial and naval power ends. But he feels he should make some remarks about the difficulties of investigating the distant past to justify his hypothesis (1.20); and he notes how mistaken popular beliefs can be - he mentions the story of Harmodius and Aristogeiton the tyrannicides (which he later deals with in greater detail, VI.54ff.). These difficulties apply to more
8
Thucydides is of course referring only to military operations, not to the important contributions of the tyrants to the social and cultural development of Greece (see A. Andrewes The Greek Tyrants and W. G. Forrest The Emergence of Greek Democracy).
xxviii
recent history too, and Thucydides notes two common mistakes about the Spartan constitution which can be traced back to Herodotus. The evidence he has used to reconstruct the more remote past is the most reliable there is, more reliable than that of the poets, who exaggerate, or the 'logographers' like Hecateaus, who collected legends about the origins of their cities. He goes on in a famous 'chapter on method' (1.22) to state the principles he has himself followed in his search for reliable information about the past. His use of the sophistic distinction between logoi and erga has led to considerable argument about the extent to which Thucydides' speeches were largely his own invention: logoi in fact refers to all the combatants' motives and justifications for their actions, as set forth in dialogues, reported speech, letters and treaties as well as set speeches. What Thucydides wishes to stress is the historian's responsibility to arrive at his own interpretation of events despite the contradictions and prejudices of his sources - another clear criticism
of
Herodotus,
then than
whose
history
goes on to argue makes up for its
story-telling
(τό
μὴ
Thucydides
must
have
in
mind
when
he
that the accuracy of his own account more unattractiveness by standards of Herodotean
μυϑῶδες:
see
xliif.
below).
These chapters on method form an excursus of their own, and Thucydides now reminds us what hís argument had been by comparing the Peloponnesian-Athenian war with the greatest war in the past, the Persian war. He notes that the Peloponnesian war brought unprecedented suffering; there had been great destruction py human agents (corresponding to Herodotus' ἔργα μεγάλα), as well as natural calamities like the plague (Herodotus' ϑωμαστά). The
to
Alliance
with
Corcyra
Before he begins tell us what the
thirty
years'
These
are
truce
divided
his narrative of reasons were for
made into
plaint
(τὰς
αἰτίας
reason
(τὴν
ἀληϑεστάτην
felt
of
threatened
the
first
by
aitia;
between two
πρῶτον
Athens
classes:
xal
τὰς
πρόφασιν
Athenian
the the
and
the
Sparta
immediate
διαφοράς 1.23.6)
-
imperialism.”
Athenian
war, Thucydides proposes formal abrogation of the
intervention
in
1.23.5)
the
fact
There
in
a
446
causes
and that
follows
war
B.C. for
com-
the
real
Sparta the
between
account
Corcyra
and Corinth about control of the city of Epidamnus (Dyrrachium/ Durazzo). Thucydides begins with a digression telling us where Epidamnus is, who founded it, and what the point at issue was. In form this is no different from the ethnographic descriptions with which Herodotus introduces peoples he has not mentioned before, although it is extemely brief and Thucydides has no reason to describe any peculiar local customs. The account of subsequent hostilities is similarly straightforward, and the aims of the different parties involved are given in reported speech. The only
>
The meaning
of the
phrase
ἀφανεστάτην
δὲ
λόγῳ
has
cussed by scholars; Athenian imperialism is in fact speeches which Thucydides chooses to record, but he
been much
dis-
a major theme in those may nevertheless be
right in saying that most Greeks at the time were less conscious of it as an explanation for the war than of the Corcyrean and Potidean questions
(see
Bibliography:
Causes
of
the
War).
ΧΧῚΧ
personal
comments
Thucydides
chooses
to
add
to
the
narrative
out the particular attention the people of Corcyra paid to navy. He carries his narrative on to the destruction of a Corinthian fleet at the battle of Leucimme (435 B.C.), and
military The
preparations
Corcyrean
in
response
434
is
to
and
433
turn
to
B.C.
for
the
a
second
Athenians
point their their
expedition.
for
assistance.
At this point Thucydides gives us his first pair of speeches, one by the Corcyrean delegation stating the reasons why Athens should accept their request for an alliance, and one by the Corinthians arguing that they should not. The
speech
Corcyreans
speak
is
appeal
with
an
first.
for
The
regular
sympathy
way
(Latin
to
begin
captatio
such
a
benevolentiae),
either becuase you had in the past helped the people you were addressing, and had a claim on their gratitude, or because they had previously helped you, so that you had a right to expect them not to change their previous attitudes. But Corcyra had no previous relations of any kind with Athens, and could not take this line. Instead, the speakers have to prove two things: that the alliance they want is in the Athenians' own interest, and that the Athenians can rely on reciprocal benefits in the future.
First,
the
however,
Corcyreans
wish
to
answer
any
possible
crit-
inconsistent are they that them, against be made may that icism suddenly abandoning their policy of neutrality. They admit that this policy was mistaken: they had hitherto been able to defeat the Corinthians alone, but would now be much weaker than tne combined Peloponnesian fleet which they expected the Corinthians to lead against them.
The
main
argument
comes
with
chapter
33.
The
first
in
point
stresses the justice of their case: the Corcyreans are not aggressors. Secondly, expediency: Athens will win the undying gratitude of Corcyra, a state which has a very powerful fleet which will be ἃ great asset to Athens in the war with the Spartans which (they assert) is bound to come. The next chapters deal with two possible objections on grounds of strict legality: that Corcyra belonged to Corinth, because it had been founded by Corinthians (the Corcyreans claim that any rights the mother-city might have had, had been forfeited by her unreasonableness in rejecting arbitration to resolve the dispute over Epidamnus); and that an alliance would break the thirtyyears' peace with Sparta (it would be unjust, they suggest, for the Corinthians to be allowed to collect supporters and hire mercenaries not just from the Peloponnese but from the Athenian Empire too, while Corcyra was not allowed to look for allies anywhere). After dealing ‚with these objections, the Corcyrean speakers remind the audience of their main point, that the alliance would be in Athens' interest because (a) Corcyra will be a reliable ally since both states have the same enemies and (b) Corcyra has a powerful navy. The
peroration
of
the
speech
repeats
the
point
that
war
with
ΧΧΧ
Sparta is certain to come, and lists the help Corcyra could provide Athens (in fact, Corcyra was crippled by internal unrest from 427 B.C..onwards, and could play only a minor part in the war: see III.70 ff.); they make the additional point that it was key port on the route which warships would have to take if they intended to sail towards Italy or Sicily. The final sentence summarises the whole argument: if the Athenians stood by while Corinth gained control of the Corcyrean fleet, they would have to fight both fleets together in the coming war with Sparta.
a
The Corinthians begin their speech by saying that they must first answer certain irrelevant accusations made by their opponents - that they were aggressors, and that Corcyra had been the victim, with respect to Epidamnus. This leads to a narratio of background information similar in form to an excursus: the reason why the Corcyreans had never joined an alliance was that their geographical position gave them independence together with control of ships sailing to the Adriatic and to the west; they were in fact pirates who did not want to restrict their opportunities to extract fines from those who had to use their harbours, by entering into formal alliances with anyone else. They then try to answer the Corcyreans' point that Corinth had forfeited its rights over its colony; they say that since all their other colonies accept the mother-city's hegemony, it must be Corcyra that is being unjust and disloyal. As for the point about arbitration, that was a ploy which the Corcyreans only thought
stand
up
by
when
and
see
they
realised
them
destroy
that
Corinth
was
not
going
to
Epidamnus.
The Corinthians suppose that they have answered the accusations made against them, and that they can now go on to state their argument, that it would be unjust for Athens to make an alliance with Corcyra. They admit that the terms of the treaty of 446 B.C.
do
not
forbid
ἀγράφοι
πόλεις
(cities
which
had
not
yet
joined
in
one of the two alliances) to apply for membership. But this, they claim, cannot refer to states who are in revolt from members of one of the alliances. Athens would be greatly harmed if this were allowed - and the Corinthians point to the fact that when
Samos
revolted
from
Athens
in
440/39
B.C.,
they
had
persuaded
the
Spartans not to give the Samians any nelp!?. This argument by the Corinthians is only valid of course on the assumption that Corcyra was subject to them in the same way as Samos had been to Athens, and that was clearly not the case. The Corinthians next go on to claim that the Athenians owe them a debt of gratitude for help which they had received from Corinth in the past (in strong contrast to the Corcyreans' admission that they had no right to expect any such charis): they refer to
19
The
Corinthians
countenance
might
a planned
also
have
revolt
by
mentioned
Mytilene
that
the
(III.2.1).
Spartans
refused
to
xxxi
twenty ships which the Corinthians had lent Athens, probably in 486 B.C., during a war with Aegina (see Herodotus VI.89 and 92), and again mention the case of Samos. Thirdly, the Corcyreans' arguments about where the Athenians' best interests lay. Self-interest, they suggest, consists in making the least number of mistakes. There is no certainty that there will be a war: on the contrary, the Athenians themselves can take steps to make a war less likely, for example by sorting out their differences with Megara!!. It was far from certain that a naval alliance with Corcyra would be in Athens' better interest than a 'just' foreign policy. The Corinthians end with a peroration which to Samos: the Athenians ought not to undermine each state should be allowed to retain control dependencies.
refers yet again the principle that over its present
Thucydides gives us the result of the debate: the Athenians had to hold a second meeting before they finally accepted the proposal for a purely defensive alliance (an epimachia, not a symmachia). He comments that there were three factors which led to the Athenian decision: they expected that there would soon be a war, and liked the idea of having the Corcyrean navy on their side; they thought that if they helped Corcyra to withstand a long war against Corinth, both sides (and presumably Corinth in particular) would be weakened, much to the Athenians' advantage; and thirdly, the point that the Corcyreans had made, that they were a crucial staging-post for fleets sailing to Italy!?. Thucydides contines with a straightforward account of how the Athenians sent a small force of ten ships to support Corcyra, and how these ships ultimately openly intervened in a battle between 110 Corcyrean ships and a Corinthian-led fleet of 150 ships. The battle was a Corinthian success, but they were
unwilling
to
press
home
their
advantage
because
of
the
fortuitous
1!
The Athenians had recently passed a number of decrees directed against the people of Megara, which ritually insulted them by banning them from public places at Athens like temples or the agora. There is no reason to assume that these decrees were intended as an economic boycott to weaken a rival trading-city.
1?
come scholars have expressed scepticism about the evidence for Athenian alliances with Italian or Sicilian towns such as Leontini, Egesta and (see Meiggs & Lewis Nos. 37, 63 and 64) before Athens had Rhegium irrevocably committed herself to involvement in the West through her But this passage suggests that Thucydides may alliance with Corcyra. have believed that there were some Athenians who, even before this date, thought in terms of expanding their empire westwards - despite Pericles' opposition, and their failure to retain control over the pan-Hellenic For contrary arguments. colony they had founded at Thurii in 444 B.C. 'Athens and Egesta', Journal of Hellenic Studies 92 see J. D. Smart, 128 - 146. (1972)
xxxii
arrival of a second fleet from Athens!*. some Corinthian messengers were sent to complain to the Athenians, who said that they were only aiming to protect the integrity of Corcyra. Thucydides puts the messengers' complaint, and the Athenian reply, into direct speech, and it is interesting to see how the two little speeches balance one another sentence by sentence. Thucydides concludes his narrative of the Corcyra affair with an explanation why both sides claimed victory, and an account of the Corinthians' return voyage, and their treatment of the prisoners they had taken, which makes it clear that this was merely ἃ prelude to further hostilities. A final sentence reminds the reader that this was the first cause
for complaint δὲ αὔτη πρώτη
which the Corinthians ἐγένετο τοῦ πολέμου.
dides' accouht of the as significant in the break of hostilities.
The
Revolt
of
had against Athens - altla It is followed by Thucy-
second incident chain of events
which which
he has led to
selected the out-
Potidea
Potidea was the only colony of Corinthian origin on the Chalcidian peninsula in the North-eastern Aegean. It was vitally important for Athens to control this area, in order to prevent the spread of Macedonian power in the region, which might - and in the following century, under Philip II, did threaten Athenian imports of gold and timber from the Northern Aegean, and of grain from the Black Sea. Athens' keenness to have a colony of her own at Amphipolis!" represented a political if not economic threat which was resented by the Chalcidian Greeks, the Thracians and the Macedonians alike. Fear of possible Macedonian expansion also lay behind the alternations in Athens' diplomatic relations with Macedonia: while she welcomed a friendly Macedonia (partly because this would make it easier to obtain the timber needed by the Athenian fleet, but mainly because any military hostilities against a semi-tribal state like Macedon would be expensive, prolonged and indecisive), she preferred a weak Macedonía, and was thus prepared to support any rival chieftain who challenged the king's power. Hence the war referred to at 57.2. The Macedonian king Perdiccas retaliated
13
Thucydides' list of the commanders of this fleet (1.51.4) is one of the few passages where he, or at least his manuscripts, give information which contradicts what we know from independent sources (Meiggs & Lewis No. 61); see Marchant's note on p. 45, line 21 below
(p. 14
196).
Ennea
Hodoi,
465
B.C.
(Thuc.
I.100.3);
and
again
in
437
B.C.
xxxiii
by exploiting the discontent of some of the cities within the Delian League. Potidea appears to have had its tribute assessment massively increased from six to fifteen talents in 434 or 433 B.C. (Gomme, Commentary I p. 211); and the Chalcidians and Bottiaeans, who joined Perdiccas against Athens, resented the fact that Athens had consistently refused to recognise the existence of their federations as political entities. Thucydides does not mention these complaints; and although he explains the connection with the Macedonian war, it is the Potidean link with Corinth that he chooses to stress, since it is that link that draws the Corinthians, and with them the rest of the Spartan alliance, into the war with Athens which is Thucydides' theme. It is this need to stress the involvement of Corinth, rather than any hypothetical difficulties Thucydides may have had with his sources on the Potidean side, which makes him omit details of chronology, and results in an extremely summary account of Archestratus' and Callias' operations against Macedonia (59.2 and 61.2). Instead, Thucydides concentrates on the intervention of the Corinthian general Aristeus. He is consistently represented in a positive, almost a heroic light.!? Thus Thucydides has no hint in chapter 65 of criticism for Aristeus' curious disappearance from the besieged city. Various reasons have been suggested - that Thucydides' Corinthian informant was Aristeus himself, whom Thucydides personally interrogated after his capture by the Athenians (who executed him - II.67); or that Thucydides was ingeniously criticising Herodotus' ex-
tremely
hostile
references
to
Aristeus'
father
Adeimantus,
according to tendentious Athenian sources - had behaved cowardly fashion during the Salamis campaign (Herodotus 59; and 94).
The
Spartan
Assembly
Votes
for
who
-
in a VIII.5;
War
Thucydides chooses to highlight Aristeus' role in the Potidean revolt (rather than that of Perdiccas) in order to give the Corinthians a second aitia against Athens. In his opinion, it was Corinthian involvement which led from two local conflicts to a general war between the 'superpowers'. The context of this development was a meeting of the Spartan citizen-assembly which considered an appeal by Corinth that, as leaders and protectors of the Peloponnesian League, the Spartans should declare that Athens had broken the existing peace treaty, and that they should intervene militarily against Athens to save the Corinthian colony of Potidea. Thucydides’ introduction to this debate in chapter 67 shows that he was well aware that other states apart from
15
It has been suggested that the phrase which Thucydides uses to describe his uncertainty as to which way to turn at 63.1 is almost Homeric in tone (cf. Iliad 13.455-7: see tlestlake, Essays ch. 4).
χχχὶν
Corinth had complaints against Athens; he specifies Aegina and the so-called 'Megarian Decree' (cf. footnote 11 above), but it is the Corinthians' complaints which he has selected as significant. Thucydides' account of the debate before the Spartan Assembly consists of four speeches. The first, by the Corinthians, is answered by an Athenian delegation, which 'happened to be there on other business' (72.1); the third, in which the Spartan king Archidamus - after whom the war of 431 - 421 B.C. was later called - urges caution, is answered by a short speech by Sthenelaidas, one of the five Spartan Ephors, in favour of war. This 'tetrad' of speeches has raised several problems in the minds of commentators. Are some, or all, of them Thucydides' own invention? It seems a coincidence too good to be true for Athenians to have been on hand for some unexplained reason in order to answer the Corinthíans' complaints. So if we suppose that the Athenian speech is Thucydides' own invention, might it represent a later insertion into the account - did the original debate consist simply of one pair of speeches, with Archidamus answering point by point the Corinthians' arguments in favour of going to war? And if Sthenelaidas' bellicose summing up was also
inserted
later
to
balance
the
Athenian
speech,
does
the
difference in content between the two pairs of speeches represent a shift in Thucydides' own interpretation either of the fundamental causes of the war, or of the morality of Athenian imperialism? Scholars who thought that they could differentiate between 'early' and 'late' passages of Thucydides have suggested that the early version of the history put all the emphasis on Potidea and Corcyra as the 'causes' of the war; only later did Thucydides come to realise that the real reason was Peloponnesian fear of Athenian expansion, and this was why he added the Athenian speech. Further, it has been argued that the Athenians' justification of their power shows that the 'late' Thucydides him-
self
believed
that
the
courts giving equal morally better than
speech
must
have
Athenian
Empire,
with
its
system
of
law-
justice to citizens of subject states, was other empires (and that consequently the
been
added
after
the
collapse
of
that
empire
in
404 B.C.). On the other hand almost the opposite has also been argued: just because the Athenian speech does not answer the specific complaints of Sparta's allies but talks about the empire
in
general
terms,
Thucydides
it - and therefore it livered in 432 B.C.
Such
interpretations
must
can
have
correspond
assume
that
had to
no a
motive
speech
Thucydides'
for
inventing
actually
two
types
de-
of
explanation are mutually exclusive. But in fact the Corcyra and Potidea disputes are not alternative explanations to Spartan fear of imperialism; they are instances of that expansionary imperialism in practice. And none of the four speeches is redundant to the particular question facing Sparta at this point, whether she should go to war. The Corinthians explain why she should. The Athenians point out that (a) Athens represents no danger to Sparta, and (b) her power is such that
XXXV
action would be unwise. The Spartans then consider how to react to these propositions - with restraint, as Archidamus
argues,
or
with
emotion,
as
Sthenelaidas
feels.
The
four
speeches do not represent the political programmes of different interest-groups, each of which could be considered separately; rather, each consists of a group of arguments on the question of whether Sparta should go to war. Consequently the Athenian speech is not in fact a defence, moral or otherwise, of the Athenian empire: it is a statement of fact about Athens' real power, warning Sparta against misunderstanding that fact. Nor
should
we
see
Archidamus
and
Sthenelaidas
as
representatives
of two parties or factions within the Spartan leadership (of course, there may well have been such factions, and Thucydides may even have been aware of their existence, though he nowhere leaves that impression): they rather Bymbolise two different responses to the problem posed - one based on a cool assessment of the practical possibilities, the other an emotionnot could she which conflict a into Sparta led which reaction al win (at least not until the Athenians had destroyed themselves
in
Sicily). The
Corinthians
restraint blind
to
foreign
Spartans the the Greeks'; into details
ydides Athens
begin
(σωφροσόνη),
with
which
affairs
polemical
say
(ἀμαϑίᾳ).
attack
has
This
led
on
blindness
has just told us all about them). Sparta to rebuild her defences and construct the
parenthesis,
Spartan
them
to
be
has
made
'enslave to Athens allowing for co-responsible the Corinthians say that there is no need to go about Corcyra and Potidea (rightly, since Thuc-
Walls after the Persian Wars returns in chapter 89); just in the past, so now they are their sense.
a
they
the
criticism
(a theme to which as they failed to failing to resist
Corinthians is
meant
in
add a
(in
chapters
constructive,
allowed Long
Thucydides resist Persia Athens. In
68 not
and a
69)
that
hostile
TO justify the assertion that Athens is a danger, the Corinthians go on to sketch out the Athenian psyche as they see it - ever keen for innovation and dissatisfied with what is there. Consequently the Athenians by their very nature (70.9: πεφυκέναι) are intolerant of peace and continually need to expand their empire. It is necessary to remember that the views expressed are not Thucydides' own - and even if they were, there is no need to try to make them conform to the quite different picture of the Athenian character which appears else-
where
(e.g.
in
Pericles'
funeral
speech,
II.35
ff.):
they
there to convince the Spartans that Athens is a danger. ilarly, the Corinthians' critique of Spartan conservatism
ἀρχαιότροπα)
is
not
a
general
statement
in
favour
of
are Sim(71.2:
'progress':
its function is to show why Sparta's unwillingness to fight is inappropriate in the particular case of Athens. The Corinthian speech contains one other strong argument, though it is only hinted at in the peroration - the threat that if Sparta will not protect its allies, they will abandon the alliance (71.4-5).
xxxvi
Just as the Corinthians have been arguing about Athenian expansion in general, so the Athenians - as Thucydides ex-
plicitly
remarks
in
his
own
person
(72.1)
-
are
not
interested
in answering the specific complaints of Sparta's allies. In the introductory section of their speech, they themselves use the formal distinction between forensic and bouleutic oratory to repeat that they are not justifying themselves, but poining out, first, that the fact that they hold an empire is nothing to be surprised at, and secondly, that their city is
‘worthy
of
consideration’
-
i.e.
the
Spartans
should
tread
warily before provoking a war. Later they repeat that their account of how Athens' role in the Persian Wars led to the acquisition of empire is not intended to give them a moral claim to Sparta's sympathy, but as an assertion that Athens' power makes her Sparta's equal (72.2-3). Hence the stress on the size of Athens' fleet at Salamis, and the reference to Themistocles' plan to abandon Attica to the enemy (warning the Spartans that Athens under Pericles would be prepared to do the same). The acquisition of an imperial role is repeatedly said to have been a 'normal' thing. This is not a claim that the empire is 'just', but a reply to the Corinthian proposition that the Athenian character, unlike anyone else's, was naturally aggressive. The Athenians were offered the leadership of the Delian League under particular historical circumstances, and subsequently fought to retain what they had, for reasons of fear and prestige as well as advantage: that makes the Athenians no different to the Spartans (chapter 75). In direct contrast to the picture of Athens painted by Corinth, the Athenians point out how restrained their hegemony is - unlike other imperial powers like Persia, they allow citizens of subject states equal access to the justice of Athenian law-courts. Indeed, the aftermath of the Persian wars shows that Spartan rule had been less popular than Athenian, and very likely would be so again (not necessarily proof that Thucydides wrote this passage after the Greeks had had experience of Lysander's decarchies). In their peroration, the Athenians add in chapter 78 one further important argument why the Spartans should be very careful in considering where their best interests lie: the unpredictability of war, particularly of a long war. The Spartan king Archidamus is explicitly introduced to us as a man respected for his wisdom and moderation. He develops the point (81.6) that a war with Athens is likely to b2 a long war, which the next generation would still be fighting, and its outcome quite unforeseeable. He stresses that Athens' power lies in fields where Sparta cannot match it, ships and money. Neither of these resources can be built up quickly. Sparta's hoplite superiority will not help her, since Athens can import what she needs by sea; and rebellions against Athens by her island allies have no chance of succeeding. This makes victory unlikely - or even the honourable compromise settlement which
xxxvii
the
Corinthians
later
hint
might
be
acceptable
(82.6
and
120.3).
Archidamus proposes an alternative: there is no question of unilateral disarmament, but Sparta must both negotiate peacefully about the issues dividing her from Athens, and at the same time do everything to build up the military resources that give bite to such negotiations. Attica should only be invaded at the last minute: the threat of invasion would help Sparta much more than an actual war, which would exclude any chance of honourable compromise. The Spartan king makes some further remarks rejecting the Corinthian accusation that Spartan caution was equivalent to cowardice, and reiterates that the great danger in war is that chance events upset any rational planned strategy. His peroration appeals to Sparta's ancestral tradition of self-restraint, and urges the acceptance
of
Athenian
offers
to
have
their
differences
settled
by
arbi-
tration.
The
speech
by
the
Ephor
Sthenelaldas
is
extremely
brief
-
not because Thucydides wants it to illustrate the famed Laconic brevity, but because the opinions it expresses are based on a hasty emotional reaction rather than proper forethought. As Sthenelaídas himself says in the first sentence, he has simply failed to understand the force of the Athenians' speech. He concentrates on emotional arguments about Athenian acts of injustice, and the need to stand by Sparta's allies; he dismisses the fact that Sparta has few ships and little money; he rejects arbitration as a matter of speech-making, and points to divine support to urge the Spartans to vote for war. The Spartans, so Thucydides tells us, are convinced by Sthenelaidas' emotional rhetoric, and vote that the Athenians had broken the terms of the Thirty-Years' Peace.
Thucydides'
Account
The debate regarding the
Potidea
of
the
Athenian
Empire
at Sparta makes it clear that the differences Athenian alliance with Corcyra and the siege
only
crystallise
the
Peioponnesians'
fear
of
of
Athens'
continuing expansion. Thucydides now explicitly repeats the statement to this effect which he had first made in chapter 23.6, and goes on to give an account of the two historical
propositions that
Athens
those 470's
to had
Greek B.C.;
which had
the the
Athenians resources
had to
requires confines
those
a
episodes
to
96
are
their
speech:
leadership
of
empire, quite naturally and unselfconsciously. separate phases of development, and we should
not be surprised that the first while for the second Thucydides fifty
in
the
states which continued the war with Persia in the and that subsequently she applied her resources to
maintain that These are two
of
referred
accept
years. more
which
illustrate
There detailed
is
no
need
because
general
to
a detailed himself to trend
believe
Thucydides
over
that used
account, selecting a
period
chapters
different
88
xxxviii
sources,
whole
or
because
passage,
natively,
that
Thucydides for a work The
but
at
this
into the he never
first
a
never
section
late
got
section
period wrote
stage
he
further is
ἃ
decided
than
survival
to
chapter of
early
re-write
96;
how,
through
alter-
research
of Themistocles' ascendency, (see p.xlii below).
explains
the
or,
by
research
Themistocles'
polit-
ical astuteness, the Athenians were able to rebuild their walls after their city had been sacked by the Persians, at a time when the Spartans had the power to prevent this (as the Corinthians had pointed out at 69.1). Thucydides stresses the effect of Themistocles' achievement in making Athens capable of dealing with Sparta on terms of equality (91.7). Themistocles was also responsible for the fortification of the port of Piraeus, amplifying the view Thucydides has already expressed at 14.3
that it was Themistocles' advocacy of naval the foundations of the Athenian Empire.
power
that
laid
Having accounted for Athens' strength, Thucydides goes on in chapter 94 to explain how in 478 B.C. the Greek allies rejected the leadership of the Spartan admirals Pausanias and Dorcis, and gladly gave the leadership to Athens (see page xvi above). He gives us further details of Pausanias' crimes in a later digression (chapters 128 - 134). There follows the Pentecontaetia proper, Thucydides' account of Athenian foreign policy between 478 and 433 B.C., which he introduces with an editoríal chapter giving the reason for the
digression
(ἐκβολὴν,
97.2):
there
are
no
other
accounts
of
the
period. The criticism of Hellanicus' chronology is curious, since Thucydides' own account cannot pretend to precision!®. But clearly the structural reason for the digression is to illustrate a number of respects in which Athenian power developed. Thucydides does not intend to give us an exhaustive account of Athens‘ foreign affairs, and the section is certainly not intended to be a synopsis of Athens' own history in this period. It is beside the point to criticise Thucydides for telling us nothing about internal faction-politics, or institutional reforms such as Ephialtes' introduction of so-called radical democracy in the 460's B.C., or even the transfer of the League treasury from Delos to Athens.!"? The main theme is Athens' which wished to secede; this unwillingness of most allied
themselves
(when
he
says
at
ability to suppress Thucydides explains states to do any of
99.3
that
the
allies
any ally as due to the the fighting
were
αἴτιοι,
he is not of course expressing a moral judgement, but simply explaining how the Athenians had the power to do it). Only the most interesting illustrations have been selected (98.4: ἔπειτα
16 17
Bellanicus' some
of
history
these
events
of
Attica
are
appears
referred
to
to in
have
been
Section
2
published (p.xv
ff.
after above).
4O6
B.C.
xxxix
δὲ
xal
τῶν
ἄλλων
...).
Another theme is the development of Spartan/Athenian enmity: hence the comparatively detailed account of Cimon's expedition to Ithome, and of the Athenian re-settlement of Messenian
refugees the role
at of
Naupactus (101.2 - 103.3). Corinth leads him into some
Athenian
hostilities
(103.4
and
105
-
Thucydides’ interest in detail on Corinthian/ 106).
Then there is the continuing war against Persia (with no reference to any 'Peace of Callias'), mentioning the Eurymedon, Cyprus, and especially the disastrous expedition to Egypt. The effect Thucydides is here aiming at (especially at 105.3) is to make the reader realise just how many campaigns the Athenians were able to sustain at one and the same time. And one other point that emerges here is that although Athens might lose hoplite battles (108.1), such defeats in no way impeded her ability to continue to expand. Even temporary loss of control of the sea (117.1) did not prevent Athens from ultimately restoring her rule over a rebellious ally like Samos (to which the Corinthians had referred in their address to the Athenian assembly: 40.4 and 41.2).
Congress
of
the
Peloponnesian
League
Thucydides completes his account of the rise of Athenian power by linking the Corcyra and Potidea conflicts into this chain of events (they occurred 'not many years later' than Samos and Byzantium - actually six or seven). These particular causes
of
complaint
Xaréctn)
are
against
all
Athens
specific
(here
instances
labelled
of
the
as
ὅσα
πρόφασις
‘ultimate
cause’
of
the war, the growth of Athenian power. The Spartans had now decided that Athenian imperialism had to be stopped, and if possible destroyed. They accordingly consulted Apollo at Delphi, whose oracle replied that he would support them even if he was not asked to - a reference to the plague, which affected Athens much more seriously than the Peloponnese (II.54.4). But the replies of the gods can not be subjected to the same verification as human logoi: Thucydides carefully distances himself from the god's purported answer with the phrase ὡς λέγεται (118.3). There follows an account of a congress of all of Sparta's allies, summoned to vote on whether the Athenians had broken the Thirty Years' Peace, and had thereby provoked war. This is sometimes called the 'Second Congress' at Sparta, incorrectly the first debate (chapters 67 - 87) was not a Congress of the League, but a meeting of the Spartan Assembly. That meeting had committed Sparta to war; now the Peloponnesian League as a whole had to be persuaded that the war should be fought, and soon, and that it could be won. Again
Thucydides
selects
Corinth
as
the
state
which
crystallises
xl
feeling in favour of war because of her links with Corcyra and Potidea. He gives the Corinthian delegation a speech expressing the view that the Peloponnesian League can win the war; almost every one of the arguments put forward is belied by the actual course of the war as Thucydides later describes it. And these arguments are also controverted by the Athenian leader Pericles in the speech which marks the Athenian decision to go to war (chapters 14O - 144). It may be noted that while Pericles' speech warns the Athenians to avoid emotion, and expresses fear of the unforeseen in war, the Corinthians marshal a series of decidedly non-rational arguments. They begin by praising Sparta for already having taken the decision to fight (referring back to their criticism of Sparta for its passivity in chapter 69), and go on to exhort even those inland Peloponnesian states not threatened by Athens to vote
in favour of men (ἀγαθῶν)
war: even if wise men (σωφρόνων) prefer resist aggression. But the Corinthians
peace, accept
brave that
aya9oi should also be prepared to compromise to bring a war to an end, and they should not be overconfident if they achieve some successes: for luck can be more important than planning (120.4). The course of the Archidamian War bears out the fact that both Athenians and Spartans ignored these propositions at their peril; it is ironical that the Corinthians here think that they buttress the case for war. Subsequent events show that the Corinthians' other arguments were similarly without foundation. The lack of a trained navy could not be overcome by attracting sailors over from the Athenian fleet with offers of higher pay, and the claim that one Peloponnesian naval victory would finish Athens off as a maritime power was soon to be spectacularly disproved by Phormio's battles off Naupactus (II.83 - 92). The Corinthians' argument is the non-rational
one asset
that than
their the
natural
bravery
Athenians'
(φυόει
technical
ἀγαϑόν)
is
a
more
valuable
expertise.
The next suggestion (chapter 122), about supporting revolts by Athens' allies, is shown to be specious by Thucydides' account of the Mytilene rebellion in book III; the proposal to mount a permanent Spartan garrison in Attica was not taken up during the Archidamian War (and after the capture of the Spartans at Pylos in 424 B.C., would have been impossible). The Pylos episode proved that the Corinthians had been quite wrong to count on the support of τύχη. The Corinthian appeal to enthusiasm (εὐοργήτως) is baseless. The Corinthians go on to make an emotional call for unity against Athens, the tyrant city, based not just on the freedom/ slavery polarity, but also on accusations of cowardice (αἰσχρὸν and δειλίαν: 122.3) and comparisons with the ancestors' achievements. A long peroration stresses the support of Apollo (a non-
rational
argument)
and
of
'the
rest
of
Greece'
(which
proved
of
little help), appeals to the racial kinship of the Dorians for support of Potidea against the Ionian Athenians, repeats that a war is fought to make secure the peace that follows (though there
xli
was
-
or
little
that
that
of
was
404,
secure
for
about
that
the
matter),
Peace
and
of
ends
Nicias
with
the
in
421
B.C.
slogan
that
the war was intended to liberate Greece from a tyrant city. Thucydides' account of what actually happened in the subsequent war emphasises the gap between these sentiments and political reality.
The
Stories
of
Pausanias
and
Themistocles
Despite the Corinthians' keenness for immediate action and the support for war amongst a majority of allies, the Spartans were not ready to challenge Athens. Almost a year went by before hostilities began - not, as Thucydides suggests in chapter 125, with a carefully planned invasion of Attica, but with an unexpected attack by Thebes on the Athenian ally Plataea (II.2). To impress upon the reader the length of this intervening
period,
Thucydides
does
not
continue
immediately
with
Pericles'
speech answering the points the Corinthians had made at Sparta and committing Athens to war, but first tells us about diplomatic moves by both sides, intended to strengthen their propaganda position. Both the initial embassy from Sparta, and the Athenian embassy sent in response, deliver complaints based on religious curses whose roots lay in the past, and Thucydides gives us digressions explaining the historical circumstances of two of them. The Spartan demand is for the Athenians to expel the descendants of a group of magistrates who in the seventh century B.C. had executed the supporters of a would-be tyrant called Cylon, although these men had taken sanctuary at the altar of Athena on the Acropolis. The Athenians counter with two similar claims, one relating to some Helots whom the Spartans had killed although they had taken refuge at the Temple of Poseidon at Taenarus, the second to a curse laid upon the Spartans by the goddess
Athena
Chalcioicos
(‘of
the
Bronze
House')
for
having
starved
to
death the Spartan regent Pausanias, although he had fled to her temple as a suppliant. While Thucydides deals with the Taenarus curse in a single sentence at 128.1, he includes a very full explanation of the story of Cylon, and adds a comment giving the reason for this curious diplomatic protest ostensibly made to honour Athena: it was because the Athenian leader Pericles was descended from one of the accursed clans (the Alcmaeonids) on his mother's side, so that although the Spartans knew that there was absolutely no likelihood that the Athenians would actually exile him because of the curse, it might make political life in Athens a little more difficult for him. Thucydides' account of the second Athenian complaint - the curse of Athena Chalcioicos - is much longer still, with details of the various accusations which had been made against Pausanias and of his correspondence with the Persian king, already referred
xlii
to at 95.5. When he has finished this digression by reminding the reader that its purpose was to explain the basis of the Athenian counter-claim (135.1), Thucydides continues with a further digression, telling us that the Athenian statesman Themistocles was also involved in the accusations of co-operating with Persia. It is only after a detailed and highly laudatory account of Themistocles' flight from Argos (where he was living in exile) to the Persian court (chapters 135 - 138) that Thucy-
dides
returns
to
the
diplomatic
activities
of
432/1
B.C.
Why did Thucydides wish to include so much material on issues which (as he himself takes pains to point out) did not motivate the two parties to the dispute in any real sense, but were at best specious pretexts to score propaganda points? Since antiquity, commentators have found these digressions - and particularly the tales of Pausanias and Themistocles - more difficult to account for than virtually any other episode in Thucydides' history!®, and numerous explanations of quite different kinds have been suggested. One simple explanation has been in terms of available sources: that it just so happened that there already existed a written account of the life of Themistocles, which also contained material about the accusations against Pausanias. Various candidates for the authorship of such a biography have been proposed, most plausibly Charon of Lampsacus. Only fragments of his Persian and Greek histories survive!®, and it is not certain just when in the fifth century he wrote. It is certainly possible that he included material about Themistocles in a chronicle of his native city - which had, after all, been allocated to Themistocles for his supply of wine (138.5). Another explanation of the peculiar nature of these episodes has been that they survive from a very early stage of the development of Thucydides' historical method: thus on the unargued assumption that Herodotus is 'more primitive' than Thucydides, Thucydides had not yet escaped from Herodotean notions about history when he wrote these passages. One view has been that the material on Pausanias and Themistocles was originally destined for the hypothetical work on the Pentecontaetia (p.xxxviii above). We may note that the reference to Themistocles' relatives at 138.5 suggests individual research by Thucydides. But even if there is some basis for the assumption that Thucydides was using an earlier work by Charon or by himself, this does not explain why he thought it necessary to include this information in a history of the Peloponnesian War. Still less does it explain why the 'late' Thucydides allowed both the content and the style of these digressions to differ so markedly
18
One
scholiast
13
Jacoby,
commented
FGrHist
(IIA,
1
that
'here
tf.,
No.
the 262.
lion
laughed':
xliii
from the rest of his work. There is the repeated use of λέγεται (132.5; 134.1 and 138.1), as though Thucydides, like Herodotus, here merely repeats stories instead of presenting the reader with his own carefully researched conclusions. There are the fairy-
tale elements of Pausanias seeking the hand of the Great King's daughter in marriage (while Herodotus (V.32) only reports a rumour that Pausanias wished to marry the daughter of the Persian general Megabates); the story of the messenger opening Pausanias' letter to the king and finding that it asked for him to be executed; or Themistocles as a suppliant holding king Admetus' baby. In particular, there are the three letters cited by Thucydides, who elsewhere in his history eschews documentary evidence apart from a handful of peace treaties. It looks as though Thucydides deliberately tried to make the stories of Cylon, Pausanias and Themistocles different from the rest of his history - and remarkably like Herodotus' narrative, which is full of similar quaint stories about how campaigns began for apparently non-rational reasons: personal animosities, or a king's dream. Not only do such patterns of explanation occur no-where else in Thucydides, but he himself has already explicitly told the reader that he saw no place
in
his
work
for
τὸ
μυϑῶδες.
What Thucydides seems to be doing is saying that quite apart from the rational motives for going to war, and the rational arguments about how such a war should be fought - the real which claims non-rational also - there were history of his material the political leaders involved did not themselves believe, but were prepared to manipulate. Such 'curses of Athena' form no part of Thucydides' picture of rational policymaking; but they are precisely the sort of motifs which Herodotus continually used to explain political behaviour. Hence Thucydides' account of the curses is Herodotean - an assertion not only that Thucydides could have written a history to rival Herodotus' if he had wished to, but also that Herodotus in providing such stories had failed to give proper explanations for why men went to war. That is why Thucydides refuses responsibility for
the
veracity
of
these
stories
as he had used the phrase self from the report that Spartans to go to war.
by
using
ὡς λέγεται the Pythian
the
word
(118.3) Apollo
λέγεται
-
just
to distance himhad encouraged the
Criticism of Herodotus also extends to Thucydides' moral judgement of Pausanias, whom Herodotus speaks of simply as a great military leader, and Themistocles, who appears as a dis-
tinctly picture made in could be may also
rule about years
devious character in Herodotus. of Pausanias naturally reinforces chapter 94 that allied discontent ascribed to Pausanias' have been coloured by
(just
as
Alcibiades
may
Thucydides' negative the point already with Sparta in 478 B.C.
personal arrogance. later experience of
have
influenced
Themistocles), but since Thucydides' of the war does not exist, we shall
The picture Lysander's
Thucydides'
account of never know.
the
ideas last
xliv
The Themistocles story digression explaining the
gives
the
reader
mentioned
(69.1)
some
earlier,
and
the
is explicitly separated from curse of Athena Chalcioicos.
additional
the
information
reconstruction
beginnings
of
Athenian
of
about
the
naval
facts
Athenian
power
the It
too
already
walls
(14.3).
But
Thucydides' strong praise for Themistocles as an ideal of the kind of statesman who can see what the future requires, shows that he is not simply giving his reader more facts, or correcting
false
stories
such
in Aristophanes, the walls which
(hinted
at
Knights 84). By praising the construction effectively made Athens into an impregnable
as
that
of
island, and the decision to Thucydides is preparing the
of
Themistocles'
suicide
turn Athens into a naval power, reader for the appearance of the
figure who embodies rational statesmanship by these policies for the coming war: Pericles.
Pericles'
The
First
advocating
just
Speech
Corinthians'
speech
had
signified
the
final
decision
to
fight on the part of the Peloponnesian League. Now Athens has to decide whether to take up the challenge. Apart from the first embassy, with its 'Herodotean' complaints, Sparta sent two further delegations. The second protested about specific Athenian acts of hostility (relating to Potidea, Aegina and the Megarian Decree), while the third delivered ἃ general demand that Athens allow all Greek states to be free - i.e. abandon her empire. Of the many speakers who expressed views on the Spartan ultimatum in the ensuing debate of the Athenian ecclesia, Thucydides chose Pericles to explain why the Athenians had enough confidence in victory to prefer the risks of war to capitulation to Sparta. Pericles' speech is composed so as to contradict the final Corinthian speech almost at every point. While the Corinthians congratulated Sparta on having changed her mind at long last,
Pericles
stresses
the
importance
of
consistency
in
politics:
he hopes that those who support him now will continue to do so even if the unforeseeable chances of war make things difficult. Thucydides here points forward to the reaction against Pericles' policy of restraint in the aftermath of the plague, described in book II. But it is interesting that while Pericles cannot of course foresee the terrible effects of the plague, he is well aware that in war unpredictable factors can destroy all the carefully laid plans of political or military leaders - while the Corinthians (122.1) had actually used the same argument to give them hope. Pericles'
Athens
can
reason
either
be
for
why
Sparta's
war
is
equal,
necessary
or
her
is
a
simple
inferior.
one:
If
she
to be an equal, she must resist any Spartan attempt to enforce obedience; yet Sparta was appealing to force, since she had rejected Athenian offers to go to arbitration, as appropriate to
is
xlv
equals
(ἀπὸ
τοῦ
ἴσου:
140.5).
If
fear
of
Spartan
Athens give in to any one particular Spartan would give in to anything the Spartans might future - and that would make Athens Sparta's
141.1;
cf.
δουλείαν
in
the
Corinthians'
threats
made
demand, then Athens demand in the subject (δούλωσιν:
speech
at
122.2).
The following chapters answer point-by-point the optimistic reasons given by the Corinthians why they expected an easy victory over Athens. The Spartans' Peloponnesian allies are peasant farmers who have no financial resources for a long war, nor for a naval war. The Corinthians had suggested that one Spartan victory would destroy Athenian hegemony; Pericles replies that the Peloponnesians might well win one battle, but the command-structure of their alliance would make it impossible for them to implement any long-term strategies (and there are many instances of that problem in the following pages of Thucydides). But their main weakness is lack of money: this will make it impossible for them to man a fleet, or keep a permanent base in Attica (as the Corinthians had argued could be done in chapters 121 and 122 respectively). Even if Sparta confiscated the treasures of Apollo at Delphi or Zeus at Olympia as the Corinthians had proposed, they could still not buy mercenary sailors from Athens or the cities within her Empire. Pericles goes on to summarise what Thucydides - and most historians since - considered to be the essence of his policy for fighting the war: to abandon the country districts of Attica to the enemy if need be, and retire behind the Long Walls as if Athens were an island - and at no cost to give way to any emotional desire to risk a battle in order to protect Athenian property. This corresponds to Themistocles' policy in the face of the Persian invasion. In his peroration (chapter 144), Pericles again underlines that Athens must insist on being treated as Sparta's equal Athens should accept arbitration, but if Sparta wants her to revoke the Megarian Decree, then she has no right to implement
similar
expulsion
procedures
against
Athenians
visiting
Laconia
and if Athens' allies are to be 'free', then so must Sparta's. He ends with a rhetorical commonplace about the need for Athenians to live up to the precedent set by their fathers during the Persian Wars; but Thucydides has also put into his mouth at 144.1 a more ominous passage warning the Athenians against their own mistakes, and especially the temptation to add to the empire before the war with Sparta had finally been settled - ἃ point which Pericles does not in fact develop in any of the other speeches Thucydides gives him, but which clearly coincides with Thucydides' own view that the disastrous failure of the Sicilian expedition in 415/3 B.C. was the prime reason for Athens' ultimate defeat (11.65.12). Pericles of course died in the plague; whether his policies for the war would in fact have forced Sparta to the conference table after a number of years is arguable, but in any case the compromise Peace of Nicias which ended the ten years of the Archidamian War was not the result of
xlvi
rational planning by either side, but of just such a series of unforeseen events - the capture of Pylos and Amphipolis, the deaths in battle of Cleon and Brasídas (described in books IV 24) - about which Pericles, and Thucydides, had expressed such pessimistic foreboding.
V,
xlvii
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405.
(Manchester,
Thucydides' Dates 465 (Longman/Canada, 1972).
1969) 431
53 the
ch. B.C.
- 67:Greek
2.
Themistocles P.
J.
and
Pausanias:
Rhodes:
'Thucydides
on
Historia
19
(1970)
Pausanias
387
and
-
Themistocles',
400.
A.
Podlecki:
The
Life
of
Themistocles
(London,
1975).
R.
J.
Lenardon:
The
Saga
of
Themistocles
(London,
1978).
H.
D.
Westlake:
on
and
'Thucydides
Pausanias
- a Written Source?', 27 (1977) 95 - 110. W.
G.
Forrest:
R.
J.
Lenardon:
A.
J.
‘The
Podlecki:
Thucydides G.
‘Themistokles Quarterly 10
and
the
Chronology
and
(1959)
-
23
(1970)
104
climate Art
of
A.
H.
Ll.
Stadter
(ed.):
Hudson-Williams:
C.
N.
Cochrane:
M.
I.
Finley:
68
D.
H.-P.
of
293
-
in
of Thucydides 19723). in 45
and
the
Science
of
'Athenian
Demagogues',
Society
in
Studies
(London,
1974)
Intelligence in Mass., 1975).
'The
History
1929).
Chance and (Cambridge,
Hammond:
|
73.
(Munich,
L.
Hill,
Athens', = New Series
Thukydides
G.
Athens:
(Chapel
Stahl:
N.
di
Greece
Individuals 1969).
Edmunds:
Rivista
311.
fifth-century
Westlake:
D.
8
1963).
-
Thucydides
Ancient
H.
Pausanias',
"Political Speeches Classical Quarterly
(Oxford,
Historia
Persuasion
The Speeches N. Carolina,
(1951)
Classical 241.
48. and
The
Quarterly
Themistokles'
'Themistokles
(Princeton, P.
of
Exile’,
Filologia
intellectual
Kennedy:
and Argos‘, (1960) 221 -
Ostracism
Themistocles
Classical
Arrangement
Thucydides
of
1
-
25.
(Cambridge,
1966):-
the
in
in
German.
Thucydides
Thought
in
the
Proem and in Other Parts of Thucydides I', Classical Quarterly 46 = New Series 2 (1952) 127 - 141.
11
H.
R.
Rawlings:
The
Structure
(Princeton,
Those who essays on
of
N.J.,
Thucydides'
History
1981).
read German will find Hermann Strasburger's various Thucydides particularly interesting. They have now
been re-published New York, 1982).
in
Studien
zur
Alten
Geschichte
II
(Hildesheim/
The text of Dionysius of Halicarnassus' essay On Thucydides is published in the Loeb series, with a translation by S. Usher: The Critical Essays, I, 462 ff. (Cambridge, Mass., and London, 1974). There is also a translation with commentary by VW. Kendrick Pritchett (University of California Press, 1975).
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46
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ISTOPIQN A (142-143) καὶ
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δ ἡμεῖς ἐπὶ τὴν ἐκείνων πλευσούμεθα, Kal
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ἣμεν
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ἀληπτότεροι
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τὴν
μὲν γῆν καὶ
οἰκίας
15 τῆς δὲ θαλάσσης
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φυλακὴν
διανοηθέντας καὶ
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ὀργισθέντας πολλῷ πλέοσι μὴ διαμά-
τούτου
ἀφεῖναι,
ἔχειν,
‘We must not. , them in Attica.
χεσθαι (κρατήσαντές Te γὰρ αὖθις οὐκ ἔλάσσοσι μαχούμεθα καὶ ἢν σφαλῶμεν, τὰ τῶν ξυμμάχων, 42) ὅθεν ἰσχύομεν, προσαπόλλυται' οὐ γὰρ ἡσυχάσουσι μὴ ἱκανῶν ἡμῶν ὄντων Em αὐτοὺς στρατεύειν), τήν τε ὀλόφυρσιν μὴ οἰκιῶν καὶ γῆς ποιεῖσθαι, ἀλλὰ τῶν σωμάτων" οὐ γὰρ
τάδε
τοὺς
45 κτῶνται.
ἄνδρας, καὶ εἰ μην
ἐξελθόντας
ἐκέλευον
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ABEF
ποννησίονς cett.
ὅτι
ἀλλ᾽’
οἱ
ἄνδρες
ταῦτα
πείσειν ὑμᾶς, αὐτοὺς ἂν
αὐτὰ
δηῃῶσαι xai
τούτων
γε
16. Πελοπονησίοις
δεῖξαι
ἕνεκα (sic)
C:
οὐχ Πελο-
130
144
OOYKYAIAOY
“Πολλὰ δὲ καὶ ἄλλα ἔχω ἐς ἐλπίδα τοῦ ‘Nor must we Τεριέσεσθαι, ἢν ἐθέλητε ἀρχήν τε er δ ἐπὶ μὴ ἐπικτᾶσθαι ἅμα πολεμοῦντες καὶ
κινδύνους
conquest.
αὐθαιρέτους
μὴ
προστί-
θεσθαι' μᾶλλον γὰρ πεφόβημαι τὰς οἰκείας s ἡμῶν ἁμαρτίας ἢ τὰς τῶν ἐναντίων διανοίας. 2 ἀλλ᾽ ἐκεῖνα μὲν καὶ ἐν ἄλλῳ λόγῳ ἅμα τοῖς
‘Let us return
ἔργοις δηλωθήσεται"
νῦν δὲ τούτοις
nswer.'
ἀποκρινάμενοι ἀποπέμψωμεν,
Meya-
ρέας μὲν ὅτι ἐάσομεν ὠγορᾷ καὶ λιμέσι χρῆσθαι, το ἣν καὶ Λακεδαιμόνιοι ξενηλασίας μὴ ποιῶσι μήτε ἡμῶν μήτε τῶν ἡμετέρων ξυμμάχων (οὔτε
γὰρ ἐκεῖνο κωλύει ἐν ταῖς σπονδαῖς οὔτε τόδε), τὰς δὲ πόλεις ὅτι αὐτονόμους ἀφήσομεν, εἰ καὶ αὐτονόμους ἔχοντες ἐσπεισάμεθα, καὶ ὅταν 15 κἀκεῖνοι ταῖς ἑαυτῶν ἀποδῶσι πόλεσι μὴ σφίσι [τοῖς Λακεδαιμονίοις]
ἐπιτηδείως
αὐτονομεῖσθαι,
ἀλλ᾽ αὐτοῖς ἑκάστοις ὡς βούλονται" δίκας τε ὅτι ἐθέλομεν δοῦναι κατὰ τὰς ξυνθήκας, πολέμου δὲ οὐκ ἄρξομεν, ἀρχομένους δὲ ἀμυνούμεθα.
ταῦτα
γὰρ δίκαια
καὶ πρέποντα
ἅμα τῇδε
20
τῇ
8 πόλει ἀποκρίνασθαι. εἰδέναι δὲ χρὴ ὅτι ἀνώγκη πολεμεῖν (ἣν δὲ ἑκούσιοι μᾶλλον δεχώμεθα, ἧσσον ἐγκεισομένους τοὺς ἐναντίους ἕξομεν), ἔκ
τε τῶν μεγίστων κινδύνων ὅτι καὶ πόλει καὶ ss 3 ἐδιώτῃ μέγισται τιμαὶ περιγίγνονται. οἱ γοῦν πατέρες ἡμῶν vel 18.
ὑποστάντες
18. ἐν om. Dion. Hal. αὐτῶν ABEF re Hude: δὲ codd.
17.
Μήδους
καὶ οὐκ ἀπὸ
14. τε ABEF rois Λακεδαιμονίοις
16. αὑτῶν secl. Schol.
ΙΣΤΟΡΙΩΝ A (144-146) τοσῶνδε
ὁρμώμενοι,
ἀλλὰ
καὶ
131
τὰ
ὑπάρχοντα
ἐκλιπόντες, γνώμῃ τε πλέονε ἢ τύχῃ
Kal ToAun
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τούς τε ἐχθροὺς παντὶ τρόπῳ
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καὶ ὁμοίᾳ σῃ καὶ ὁμοίᾳ. καὶ οὐκέτι αὗται καὶ 146 A
δὲ
πρὸ ἀπὸ 3
ΚΚαερκύρᾳ'
δὲ ὅμως ἐν αὐταῖς καὶ
\
During events ceding there
4
/
the prethe war had been
much suspicion,
but communication had been kept up.
παρ᾽ ἀλλήλους ἐφοίτων ἀκηρύκτως , / 4 μέν,/ ἀνυπόπτως δὲ\ ob:» σπονδῶν^ yap\ ξύγχυσις τὰ γιγνόμενα ἣν καὶ πρόφασις τοῦ πολεμεῖν. ll. post τοῖς add. re ABEF
NOTES PAGE
].
1. Θουκυδίδης κτλ. —a formal method of opening, after the manner of the gnomic poets, uot due, as Bloomfield imagined, to ‘the modesty of our author.’ Cf. Herod. init. ; Intr. p. xv. ξννέγραψε--ἃ characteristic word of Thuc., who is known to the ancient critics as ὁ συγγραφεύς,
ποιητής.
It denotes the bringing
much
together
as Homer
in one work
many occurrences—composing in its etymological sense.
is ὁ
of
(How
some find ἃ reference to the hunting up of materials is not clear.)
9. és ἐπολέμησαν— ‘namely, how,’ i.e. ‘ghowing how they waged war.’ Of course different from ὃν é., which would be absurdly tautological.
The aorist is called complezive.
4. ἀρξάμενος (ToU ξυγγράψαι) κτλ — we are to understand that as soon as the war broke out Thuc. began to put down what occurred, and kept a sort of diary of the war.
εὐθὺς kaB.crapévov—supply τοῦ πολέμου. δ. ἐλπίσας —'expecting.' On the relation of the participles here see Intr. p. xli. This first sentence is very characteristic of Thuc., in whose periods form is constantly subordinated to
sense.
Ο.
Müller
well says
forms of period, («) the main
that Thuc.
bas
two
favourite
predication, followed by clauses
giving the cireumstances and reasons, which may in turn be explained in similar clauses ; and (5) the reasons, circumstances
in participial and other clauses followed by the resulting fact or opinion, as in c. 2, 2.
ἀξ
τατον τῶν T. — the illogical form of comparison,
as in c. 10, 3, cf. ‘fairest of her daughters Eve’: Tac. Agric. 34
ceterorum fugacissimi.
It is frequent in Greek. 133
134
THUCYDIDES
6. rex
I
os—‘ inferriug this,’ adding the grounds of the
ἑλπίς. "lhese grounds are (1) ὅτι áxuáforres . ., (2) ὁρῶν . . Thus the clause with ὅτι is co-ordinate with a partic. of cause ; cf. Xen. Symp. 8, 11 τεκμαίρομαι τῇ καλοκἀγαθίᾳ xal ὅτι σε ὁρῶ.
7. ἀκμάζοντές. military
power.’
.
ενῇ -- ‘at the
That
ἧσαν,
not ἦσαν,
height
of their
is the true reading
there cannot be a doubt ; for /éva: és in this pregnant use see L. & S. 8. τὸ ἄλλο ᾿λληνικόν — including the Greeks outside Greece proper. Cf. τὸ ληστικόν, τὸ βαρβαρικόν, τὸ ξενικόν, and many others. 10. καὶ διανοούμενον ---8ο. ξυνίστασθαι, the ellipse of an infin. with διανοεῖσθαι being common, as in 124, 3. "The καί serves to bring διανοούμενον into connexion with ξυνιστάμενον ; we
should put ‘actually’ with τὸ μὲν εὐθύς.
The Sicilian Greeks
are a good example.
yap—as ‘the movement’ meant by κίνησις must be (1) the war
itself, and (2) the
unrest
that preceded it, γάρ cannot
introduce the reason of the expectation that the war would be iinportant, but must be epexegetic. 12. μέρει Tw(—' a considerable part,’ as, for example, Thrace and Macedon. Supply ἐγένετο, ‘affected.’ ὡς
δὲ
εἰπεῖν —qualifring
πλεῖστον.
Note
εἰπεῖν never apologises for a metaphor,
that
ὡς (ἔπος)
but always limits a
sweeping or universal statement. Hence ‘ (it extended, ἐγένετο), one might almost say, over the greatest part of mankind’ ; i.e. it affected perhaps a greater part of mankind than had heen
affected by any previous commotion.
Of course the possible
exception is the Persian wars. (Whatever
be
the
exact
construction
of μεγίστη
δὴ.
dvOpwrwy—and the words are variously interpreted’— Thuc. over-estimates the importance of the war. If we supply μεγίστη
δὴ
ἐγένετο
to
μέρει
τινί
and
ἐπὶ
πλεῖστον,
the
ex-
aggeration is extreme. ἐπὶ πλεῖστον is taken by Classen and others to mean ‘the greatest part of the (known) world’; but
this involves a very great exaggeration of a fact ascertainable ;
and it is unlikely that Thuc.
statement.
would make such a sweeping
It looks also as if πλεῖστον,
‘more
than
before,
were meant to be parallel to μεγίστη, ‘greater than before.’ The text has no appearance of being corrupt or interpolated.) 13. τὰ πρὸ abrav— ‘the events that preceded this disturbance
(κίνησι5).
The
neut.
αὐτά is frequently used by Thuc.
with reference to the details of tlıe subject he is dealing with.
NOTES
135
(This phrase cannot refer to events that immediately preceded the war; for (a) διὰ χρόνον πλῆθος would then be absurd, (5)
Thuc. himself gives an account of the fifty years preceding the war as 8 period well known, (c) the Persian wars could not be included in οὐ μεγάλα
c. 18, 2).
νομίζω γενέσθαι κατὰ τοὺς πολέμους (cf.
Thuc. must be thinking of the period of the Trojan
war and of that between the Trojau war and the Persian war,
i.e. to exact ; 14. 15.
the end of the Tyrants. But the words are very incf. Intr. p. xx). τὰ ἔτι wadalrepa—events preceding the Trojan war. &bóvara—Thuc. frequently uses the neut. plur. of the
verbal or of an adj. for the sing. where tbe subject is an infin.
or a sentence. The use is mainly poetical. τεκμηρίων — these ‘evidences’ are detailed
in
cc. 2-17:
(1) migrations were frequent ; (2) there was no common name ;
(3) weakness by sea; (4) the expeditions by land were on a
small scale and were confined to border-fighting
; (5) the tyrants
hampered Greece proper, and Persia hampered PAGE
d.
Ionia.
2.
1. ὧν belongs to πιστεῦσαι, and is probably attracted from Chambry quotes Soph. 0.7. 646 πίστευσον, Οἰδίπους, τάδε,
for the accus. with
πιστεύω.
ἐπὶ μακρότατον oKxorotyri—‘ by carrying my inquiry to the farthest
limit
(of the
past).’
éwi
μακρότατον
of time also in
Herod. i. 171, in a similar connexion.
5.
οἰκουμένη — this
and
the
following
participles
are
imperfect. 6. οὖσαι---8.. φαίνονται.
τὰ πρότερα —the adverbial accus. in plur. is common in Thuc., but is seldom found in other prose authors. 8. Biatdnevor—the pres. and imperf. of this verb in a ive sense are far less common in other prose authors than in Thuc. ὑπό τινων ale πλειόνων — what is noticeable here is that αἰεί (‘from time to time’) occurs with τινων, and not with τῶν,
which—as
the
older critics note—is
the
usual
form
of
expression.
9. τῆς γὰρ ἐμπορίας xrÀ.—see note on p. 1 1 6. The causes to which the readiness to migrate are ascribed are (1) absence
of commerce
and
intercommunication:
τῆς
yàp
. .
136
THUCYDIDES
I
θαλάσσης : (2) low state of agriculture and absence of capital sunk in the laud: veuöuerol τε. . $vreborres : (3) absence of
demand for anything beyond the necessaries of life, which could be procured anywhere: τῆς T€ . . ἐπικρατεῖν. c. 146.
Uvres—the mid.
is used
in the same sense, e.g. in
At a period when the tribes of Greece regarded
one
another as enemies, it was impossible that ἐπιμιξία should exist,
ἐπιμιξία being
based upon
treaties.
In later times ἐπιμιξία
terminated as soon as ἃ state of war existed. 10.
&«& —the sea as the medium of intercourse.
11. vepdpevor—the
word
is used
of
enjoyment
derived, which may be combined with occupation.
of
profils
The follow-
ing participles—£xorres, durevovres—are circumstances explanatory of the degree of ‘enjoyment’ attained. (νέμεσθαι ws τὸ πολὺ
τὸ Nap Bdvery πρόσοδον παρὰ Θουκυδίδῃ, Photius.) τὰ atrév-—what they had acquired by adverse possession.
12. Seov—i.e. τοσοῦτον, ὅσον, where ὅσον = ὥστε, and is assimilated to the adverbial accus. τοσοῦτον.
&To[fjv—this
word
occurs
used by late writers (Lucian,
nowhere Aelian,
else in Attic, etc.), some
but is
at least of
whom think it means 'to live poorly,' inferring the sense implied in this passage. περιουσίαν κτλ. — had they accumulated stores for the purpose of barter, and had they planted trees, it would have n less easy to migrate.
13. ἄδηλον Sy—accus. abs. 14. ἐπελθὼν καὶ ἀτειχίστων ἅμα 8. —(1) alternative explanations, seldom desirable, are here clearly called for ; (2) taking ἀτειχίστων
ὄντων
first:
the sense is,
‘as they
were
without
walls.’ The simplest way is to suppose this masc. and dependent on ἀφαιρήσεται. This involves making xal. . ἅμα almost equivalent to ἄλλως re xal : καί, we are told, does
not z'and,'
but καὶ. . ἅμα —*particularly,' as in 102, 3 and elsewhere. But (3) this makes it impossible to explain why τις. . ἄλλος, which go together, are separated, because ἐπελθὼν. . ὄντων is not then one expression. (4) This objection is diminished if xal . . ὄντων is taken as ἃ parenthetical gen. abs., either (a) masc., with αὐτῶν supplied, or (b) neut., with subj. supplied from context, like πλωιμωτέρων ὄντων c. 7. (5) The objection disappears if
xa( —'and,' ἐπελθὼν καὶ á. ἅμα ὄντων
stances leading to ἰο88--- ἀφαιρήσεται.
giving
ough
the two
circum-
one circumstance
NOTES
137
is modal—éwehOwv—-the other causal, it is like Thuc. to connect them by καί.
15. dvayxalov—of what will just suffice, as in necessarius cibus.
ἀναγκαῖος is frequently fem. in Plato.
always have two terminations in Thuc. 16. vavraxoó—'anywhere.' The
sense
βίαιος and βέβαιος
any
frequently
belongs to πᾶς and words from it.
17. δι’ abró—'accordingly '; Thuc. often uses αὐτό (-ά) in reference to ἃ previous statement.
μεγέθει--οὐ the number of inhabitants, as in c. 10. 18. παρασκευῇ. naval and military resources, as distinct from κατασκενή, the external adornment of a city. 19. ἡ ἀρίστη--οἴ. τῆς γῆς οὐ πολλὴν ἔτεμον
vi.
T.
The
attraction 18 most common with πολύς, but is fairly frequent with other adjectives.
20. νῦν. . καλουμένη belongs to both nouns. In early times the districts had no general name. 22. 'ÁpkaB(as—the exemption was due to the isolated character of Arcadia, the consequence of its mountains. ἄρκτος, ‘Bear-land’; cf. dpxecos. The Arcadians were unaffected ly the Dorian migration. They prided themselves on bein autochthones (cf. Xen. Hell. vit. i. 28), and on their primeva
antiquity (cf. L. & S. under προσέληνοϑ). xpariora—‘ best,’ the regular meaning of κράτιστος when applied to land. 23. äperhv—fertility.” When Greece was in the village stage, (1) the inhabitants of some districts grew (comparatively) wealthy, and as a consequence there were disputes between the ' haves’ and ‘have-nots’
cupidity of other clans. 25.
wa
—more
; (2) these fertile districts excited the than communities
whose land was
not
so fertile.
20. γοῦν --- δ any rate’ the immunity of Attica was due to its barrenness ; it is therefore likely that the troubles of other districts were due to their fertility. τοῦ
ἐπὶ
adverbial
πλεῖστον,
‘the
remotest
('extending farthest
back"),
time.’
has the
ἐπὶ
art.
πλεῖστον,
like τὸ
πρίν, etc.
τὸ Aenröyeav—(1) the constant use of neut. adj. or partic. for ἃ subet.
is a feature
of Thuc.'s
style;
(2) the
soil of
188
THUCYDIDES
I
Attica is in general stony and dry. The Attic Plain is watered by the Ilissus and Cephisus, but in summer the former is almost dry and the latter “" μειοῦται τελέως " : the land yields a return only to diligent cultivation. Of course in these early times the land was not scientifically dealt with ; and it is note-
worthy, as bearing on Thuc.'s point, that it looks more barren than it is.
28.
wapéSaypa—the meaning of this term in Greek rhetoric
is not merely ‘example,’ but ‘an example used to support an argument,’
r68«—referring to the sentence that follows, ἐκ γάρ κτλ. τοῦ Adyou—explained by διά, etc. 29. διὰ τὰς μετοικίας xrA.—‘that it was owing to the habit of settling elsewhere (to which I have referred) that Greece in
other
advanced
respects
(besides population
so fast (as Attica).’
Aesch. Zum.
and
security) had
not
μετοικίας is used exactly as in
1019, where the Furies refer to their μετοικία to
and in Athens.
1. That ἐκ γάρ κτλ. explains τόδε is proved by
the usage of Thuc.
2. διὰ... αὐξηθῆναι is beset with difficulties.
With the MS. reading τὰς μετοικίας és τὰ ἄλλα three explanations have been proposed : (a) ‘Attica did not grow in other
respects so fast as 1n population. But this does not fall in with the general line of the argument. (ὁ) ‘ Attica through the presence
respects.”
of μέτοικοι advanced
much
more (μὴ ὁμοίως) in other
But neither is this the argument,
proof that μὴ *much more.'
nor is there any
ὁμοίως can in such a connexion as this mean (c) With regard to the rendering given above.
it is denied that Greece can be the subject of αὐξηθῆναι. But, if we examine c. 2 as a whole, this does not appear impossible.
The chapter deals with the early condition of Greece in general—
ἡ νῦν ᾿Ελλὰς kaXovuéyy —the smallness of the communities (οὔτε
μεγέθει πόλεων ἴσχυον) and their weakness.
To these conditions
the very fertility of the soil contributed. Attica, which was barren, was an exception in both respects. It did not lose inhabitants by στάσις: it did not excite the cupidity of strangers. On the other hand, strangers settled in Attica because it offered security ; and thus the population of Attica was still further increased, and it was able to colonise.
These
last facts lend further support to my general argument (ὁ λόγος),
viz. that the weakness of the early Greeks in all respects is largely accounted for by the shifting nature of the population. ἡ Ἑλλάς is in the writer's mind throughout. és rà ἄλλα is explained by many * with reference to its other parts' ; but it more naturally means ‘in other respects than those points to
NOTES
139
which I have specifically referred." A striking example of this (ex contrario) is the colonising energy of Attica, the consequence of freedom from migration. Some take és rà ἄλλα with neroıxlas—migrations
to other parts;
but τά is then
of Greece,’
of αὐξηθῆναι---866
wrong.
Ullrich's emendation, according to which rà ἄλλα, ‘ other parts is subject
crit.
n.—is
generally
accepted ; but it is not absolutely necessary. PAGE
3.
2. moAdap—referring to ὑπὸ ἀλλοφύλων ἐπεβουλεύοντο. 3. οἱ Svvarérara.—limiting apposition to οἱ ἐκπίπτοντες. This kind of apposition is common in Thuc. — The most conspicuous instance is that of the Alemaeonidae from Pylus. ὡς βέβαιον Óv—taken as (1) accus. abs., with ἀναχωρεῖν wap’ ᾿Αθηναίους implied ; (2) by Classen as governed by παρά, in & loose apposition to ᾿Αθηναίους. in grammar, gives a better sense.
4.
πολῖται ytyvéuevor—the
"The second, though loose
imperf.
partic.
points to the
many instances in which citizenship was bestowed. Of course this system of conferring civic rights belongs to a time when
only the Eupatrids had any political power. "They admitted new families freely. In la£er days, on the contrary, when
Athens had attained power and the demos ruled, the Ecclesia
was
very jealous
political
exiles
ἀπὸ π., 142, 7.
being
of the citizenship.
Yet
remained
an
honourable
equivalent
to
ἀρξάμενοι
from the plays of Euripides. εὐθὺς ἀπὸ παλαιοῦ with
this welcome
tradition,
ἐποίησαν,
as
we
of
see
but εὐθύς belongs εὐθύς : cf. c.
146
to and
7. ἐξέπεμψαν ---8.. οἱ ᾿Αθηναῖοι. The colonising activity of Attica is supposed to have begun in the eleventh cent. B.c. 9. δηλοῖ — second proof of weakness, viz. lack of communication. τῶν
παλαιῶν — neul.,
παλαίτερα in c. 2. πρὸ τῶν Τρωικῶν.
like
τὰ
πρὸ
αὐτῶν
Here τὰ παλαιά is explained
καὶ
τὰ
ἔτι
to mean τὰ
The lit. trans. is ‘insignificance in our early
history.’ 11. wpérepov—this merely repeats the sense of πρό, as in οὐ πρότερον . . πρίν κτλ.
12. (2)
δοκεῖ
δοκεῖ
ἡ
δέ μοι-- (1) ἐπίκλησις
οὐδὲ
at first parenthetical, εἶναι,
(8)
δοκεῖ
ἄλλα
afterwards (nom.)
.
140
THUCYDIDES
παρέχεσθαι,
(4)
before éóóraro.
δοκεῖ “EAAnvas When
I
καλεῖσθαι,
a verb can
take
(5) ? more
parenthetical, than
one
con-
struction, Thuc. sometimes combines alternative constructions in the same sentence without repeating the verb.
13. τὰ πρὸ "EAAnvos—adv. ἐν τῇ
εἰρήνῃ
iii. 54,
9.
accus., as rà πρότερα c. 2, rà
Hellen
was
son
of Deucalion
and
Pyrrha ; and Hellenes from Phthiotis accompanied Achilles to Troy. How the name came to be extended to all the Greeks is unknown.
14. καὶ «ávv—emphasised
by being separated from εἶναι.
Cf. Xen. Anab i. δ καὶ μάλα κατὰ πρανοῦς γηλόφου, Demosth. δ, 15 καὶ πάνυ φησί τις αὐτοὺς ἀναισθήτους εἶναι, and so with οὐ (μή) πάνυ not unfrequently. We should rather expect οὐ πάνυ μοι δοκεῖ οὐδ᾽ εἶναι.
elva.—this and the infins. that follow are imperfect. 15. xarà Byn—Jistributive. This forms subject to παρέχεσθαι-- ‘various
tribes,’ ἄλλα
τε xal
τὸ
tlie P. tribe,' being in apposition to x. ἔθνη.
IL,
‘among
others
Ädverbiaf phrases
are frequent in Thuc. as equivalent of a case of a subst. : as in vi. 89 ταῦτα xal κατὰ μέρη xal ξύμπαντα.
16. τὸ Πελασγικόν--Α
tribe of aborigines, whom
Homer
speaks of as dwelling in Asia Minor and Crete as well as in Greece. or the facts and theories about them see Abbott, Hist. Greece i p.27 fol. *''When the Pelasgi became established [in literature] as an ancient tribe, those nations which laid claim to great antiquity, as the Athenians and Arcadians, became
elasgians. (This is enough to know.) ἐπὶ πλεῖστον —this belongs to τὸ Πελασγικόν, meaning that the name of the P. was more widely extended than that of
any other tribe.
17. παρέχεσθαι---8ς. ‘to the country.' τῶν walSev—Aeolus, Dorus, and Xuthus.
18. loxveäyrov—ingressive aor., ‘having become mighty.’ 19. ἐπαγομένων .---θ(. τινῶν. 6 ἐπ᾿ SPA —' to aid them.’ ὠφελία often=PBohdera ; cf. p. 41.
21.
20. καθ᾽ ixácrovs—subject of καλεῖσθαι : ‘the several tribes more and more (ἤδη μᾶλλον) began to be called Hellenes in consequence of their intercourse’ (with the Hellenes). 21. πολλοῦ Xpóvov-. time within which (partitive), less
commonly found
in positive sentences.
NOTES
141
22. [övvaro]—sc. τὸ καλεῖσθαι “EXAnvas.
Shil. quotes Eur.
Phoen. 12 καλοῦσι δ᾽ ᾿Ιοκάστην με, τοῦτο γὰρ πατὴρ | Edero. ‘The ἐδύνατο is probably spurious, because, though the constrn. of δοκεῖ shifts (see on
]. 12),
the
two
clauses
καθ᾽
ἑκάστους
μὲν
. . οὐ μέντοι should have the same form, just as τὰ μὲν, κατὰ ἔθνη δέ have. Even if the constrn. were again changed here, we should probably have ἐξενίκησε.
25. ὠνόμασεν---8ς. "EXAqvas. οὐδ᾽ ἄλλους --- i.e. Hellas in Homer
is Phthiotis, B 684
It has been pointed out that in a 344, ὃ 720, 816, o 80 Ἑλλάς with "Apyos denotes Greece in general. The lines are perhaps spurious.
27. τὰ ἔπη--- the poems.’ 28. ἀνακαλεῖ---' distinguishes them as.’ a distinctive, official name.’ οὐ μὴν οὐδέ--- ‘nor even’;
οὐ
ἀνακαλῶ is ‘call by
μὴν
ἀλλά-Ξ ‘not
but
what.’ PAGE
4.
1. βαρβάρους elpnxe— ‘mentioned barbarians, because not yet had the Hellenes either been distinguished under one name in opposition’ (to them). ‘There is a difficulty as to the construction of ἀντίπαλον. (1) Eustathius, followed by Stahl and
Steup,
made
it agree with
ὄνομα,
despite
the order;
and
the adj. is occasionally separated by a prep. from its aubst. ; (2) Classen thought it an adverb like τοὐναντίον : the absence of art. is one reason against this; (3) Böhme made it internal accus. to ἀποκεκρίσθαι, ‘to have undergone an opposing separation, and Krüger favours this; (4) Mr. Forbes says it is in apposition to "EAAnvas, which means ‘the word Greeks.’ But should we not even so require ἀντιπάλους or Ἕλληνες *— l'he edd. note that Thuc. neglects the epithet βαρβαρόφωνοι, of the Carians, in 7/. ii. 867. But this simply means ‘speaking an unknown tongue,’ and the statement of 'l'huc. is substantially correct. The Greeks could not be conscious that they were a separate people before thev were conscious that they were owe
people. 3. δ᾽ οὖν
— resuming
after the
digression
of
which
$ 3
consists.
ol
.
.
ὡς ἕκαστοι.
. κληθέντες — tle main subject is
οἱ Βλληνες κληθέντες, ‘those who came to be called H.' This is divided into (a) ὡς ἕκαστοι κατὰ πόλεις τε ὅσοι a. ξυνίεσαν,
142
THUCYDIDES
referring to καθ᾽ ξύμπαντες
ἑκάστους μὲν
ὕστερον,
referring
ἤδη.
I . Ἕλληνας
to oU μέντοι.
8 2; (b) καὶ
. ἅπασιν
ἐκνικῆσαι.
In (a) re- both is misplaced, the irregularity being explained
by
the fact that κατὰ.
afterthought.
. ξυνιέσαν
is added to ὡς ἕκαστοι
Possibly, however,
as an
re- and, but it is hard to see
any distinction between ὡς ἕκαστοι and xarà xv.
The sentence
is overloaded, since ὕστερον, i.e. long after the Trojan War (cf. 8 3), iscombined with & statement of what happened πρὸ τῶν
Τρωικῶν.
Observe also that this apparent recapitulation (ol δ᾽
οὖν κτλ.) does not agree entirely with the statements made in
8 2, where nothing is said about a common language.
Thuc.,
as others have noticed, does not seem to have a clear view of the matter. 8. The Ms. ξυνῆλθον will not do: ἐξέρχομαι, ἔξειμι with accus. are not rare in Áttic
εἶμι are not used so.
prose
in a military sense ; but ἔρχομαι,
9. Μίνως yap—from this point to c. 8 Thuc. deals with the gradual growth of maritime enterprise, and the ‘ barbarian character of the early Greeks.’ For Minos see Abbott, Hist. Greece i. p. 122. παλαίτατος — ‘was the first to.’ This does not belong
to τῶν Κυκλάδων.
. ἐγένετο, and perhaps not to τῆς viv . .
ἐκράτησε.
10. τῆς.
. θαλάσσηε---[ἷ8
may
depend
on ἐπὶ πλεῖστον,
or On ἐκράτησε.
12. $p£«—* became ruler.’ 13. wp@ros—later the Athenians colonised the islands, and after
that δὴ
Athenian
would
be
honoured as οἰκιστής.
See
c. 12, 4.
15. éyxatacrhoas—this
partic. is of course not antecedent
in time to the main verb ἐγένετο. is the explanation how ἐγένετο
equivalent to xal+aor.
ind.
It is aor. merely because it οἰκιστής, the partic. being
(This use of the aor. partic. in
Thuc. disposes of the passages discussed by Mr. Forbes,
7'Àuc.
i. p. 142.) ὡς «lkós—'as was natural’ (in one who ruled the sea). 16. καθήρει---ϑει] of destroying, putting an end to a power, as in c. 16, 1.
17. rot . . lévat— purpose, generally with μή. this in An. ii. 59 Aeyyptum proficiscitur antiquitatis, etc.
21. Ar'—'to,' not ‘ against.’
Tac. imitates cognoscendae
NOTES 23.
οὐ τῶν
κέρδους
143
áBvyaTreTáToy — ToO» δυνατωτάτων.
ἕνεκα — a frequent
phrase.
Notice
the place of
ἕνεκα, which is usual when it applies to two nouns, as e.g. Antiphon 6, 7 διαβολῆς ἕνεκα καὶ ἀπάτης, Lys. 82, 10 xal τῆς ἀδελφῆς ἕνεκα καὶ σφῶν αὐτῶν. But the rule is not absolute.
24. τοῖς
ἀσθενέσι
τροφῆς τοῖς ξένοις.
25. πόλεσιν
τροφῆς--οἵ. Demosth.
i. 8 22
τὰ
τῆς
ἀσθενεῖςΞΞ * weak.’
ἀτειχίστοις
—i.e.
village
communities.
We
cannot help thinking of the great aphorism in vii. 77, / ἄνδρες γὰρ
πόλις καὶ οὐ τείχη.
27. more
Blov— ‘livelihood.’ familiar
ἐγίγνετο
in
the
ἐποιοῦντο = ‘would get,’ a sense
corresponding
passive
forms,
ὁ βίος
αὐτοῖς.
érovotüyTo—see L. & S. A. II. 2.
Éxovros—synonymous with φέροντος : ii. 37, 8 (νόμων) ὅσοι αἰσχύνην φέρουσι, ib. 41, 3 τῷ πολεμίῳ ἀγανάκτησιν ἔχει. PAGE
2. δηλοῦσι--ἰ.6. ments:
there
show
is even
the
in the
5.
truth
of the
present
preceding
day evidence
state-
for what
I have said.
τῶν ἠπειρωτῶν tiwes—i.e. those dwelling in the coast towns of the mainland.
3. καλῶς---΄ cleverly,' as often in καλῶς λέγειν. τοῦτο Spav—a regular expression for referring to a previous verb. 4. οἱ TraÀavo(—sc.
δηλοῦσι.
τὰς πύστεις. . épwravres—lit. ‘everywhere agreeing in putting the stock question to strangers who come by sea,
‘Care you pirates?" thus showing
that the persons addressed
were not accustomed to disown the occupation, and
that those
who made it their business to know did not censure it.' Of *the old poets' Homer is one (Od. iii. 71 and ix. 252); and there is the Hymn to Apollo 1. 452; but of course Thuc. knew other passages. The wording of the sentence has been
questioned ; but Thuc. τῶν καταπλεόντων
seems to have had in mind ἡ cris
ἐστὶν εἰ λῃσταί εἰσιν.
The poets are said to
ask the question: for the characters are the mouthpiece of the poet.
144
THUCYDIDES
6. οὔτε
. . re frequently
I
correspond,
as in Lat.
neque
. et
πυνθάνονται.
. ἐπιμελὲς
obliqua are combined,
eln—the
forms
of the γεοία and
as frequently in Xen. -- ὧν πυνθανόμεθα
. . οἷς ἂν ἐπιμελὲς ἢ.
It expresses the thought of the poets.
(Others seem to consider πυνθάνονται as hist. pres. and εἴη as pure iterative opt.)
at
8. καὶ κατ᾽ ἥἤπειρον.---ἰ.6. they not only carried on piracy sea, hut plundered one another on land as well κατ᾽
7. — xarà γῆν.
That Thuc. is thinking here of the towns near
the coast is shown
by
c.
7 85
al δὲ παλαιαὶ
(πόλεις)
διὰ τὴν
λῃστείαν ἀπὸ θαλάσσης φκίσθησαν.
10.
τῷ
παλαιῷ
τρόπῳ--ἰ.6.
κατὰ
κώμας
οἰκούμενα
καὶ
ἁρπαζόμενα.
περί---ἰῃ the parts about.”
The names of the people are
used by Thuc. indifferently with the place-names. 12. re— ‘and so.’ 13. oSnpodopetoGar—below we have the act.: the mid. means ‘to provide one's self with, see that one has.” Such com-
pounds of φορῶ (cf. κανηφορῶ, χρυσοφορῶ) are not ordinarily used in mid. ; but cf. Arist. Pol. 1268 b. 16. olxforeus—‘ settlements,’ the πόλεις of c. δ, 1. 17. (διὰ ras) . . ἐφόδους .--΄ their hazardous intercourse.’ ξυνήθη κτλ. — ξυνήθως ἐδιῃτῶντο.
19. ταῦτα. . ἔτι οὕτω veuöueva— ‘the fact that in these parts of Greece men still live in this way.’ This redicative use of the partic. is less common
t. (see M. T. 829 b).
in Gk. than in
It is most often found with preposi-
tions, and especially in phrases indicating time, with μετά, ἐπί, áuá. With certain well-defined exceptions, it does not occur unless the noun and verb yield sense without the partic.; i.e.
the partic. was felt to be separate from the noun.
20. ἐς πάντας dpolov—lit. ‘extending in similar form to all,’ like és ὀλίγους οἰκεῖν in ii. 37, 1. The substitution of the noun διαιτημάτων for the verb inf. rod . . διαιτᾶσθαι with suitable
constrn. is characteristic of the old style. 21. ἐν
τοῖς
TpéTrov—the
undoubted
exx.
of
this
idiom
in Thuc. are, besides this place (where Prof. Tucker wrongly says the evidence favours πρώτοις), iii. 82, 1 (στάσις) ἐν τοῖς πρώτη
ἐγένετο : vii. 24, 3 μέγιστον καὶ ἐν rois πρῶτον : ib. 71, 3
ἐν τοῖς χαλεπώτατα : viii. 90, 1 ἐν rois μάλιστα.
In vii. 19, 4
NOTES
145
the M88. give ἐν rots πρώτοις (not πρῶτοι) : ib. 27, ἐν τοῖς πρώτοις (not πρῶτον or πρώτη) : in viii. 89 ἐν rois πρώτοις
Pre-eminence
(not πρῶτοι).
is not necessarily implied in auy example,
and
Herbst is perhaps right in saying that prominence only is meant.
If so, it may be that the nom. is due only to attraction to the
subject; the principle beiug naturally extended to the adverb. 22. ἀνειμένῃ τῇ διαίτῃ ---ἰαἷ. of manner. 24. αὐτοῖς---οἰῃΐο gen. might be used.
dat., very common
in Thuc.
where
the
25. εὐδαιμόνων ---ἰἶπ the popular meaning. διὰ τὸ GBpoSlatrov—with
φοροῦντες.
For
the
long
linen
(Ionian) χιτών worn by Ionians, Carians, Lydians see Gardner and Jevons, Gk. Ant. p. 49. Cf. Aesch. Persae 41 ἁβροδιαίτων
δ᾽ ἕπεται Λυδῶν ὄχλος After the Persian wars the short (Dorian) χιτών of wool was substituted for it. οὐ πολὺς χρόνος dradh-—‘no long time ago.’ ἀφ᾽ οὗ, ἐξ οὗ, ἐπεί, ὡς, ὅτε are all found in such plirases.
27. χρνσῶν τεττίγων seem to be pins with figures of
grass-
hoppers at the end. Several might be used, apparently, for one κρώβυλος, like hairpins. elbig, however, thinks that
metal spiral ornaments through which the ‘tail’ of the hair
was passed are meant, and Studniczka supparts this view ; but it does not seem probable. The xpwBvdos—which doubtless
took different forms—is perhaps to be recognised on ancient monuments,
since
Xen.
Anab.
v.
iv.
18
speaks
of leather
helinets adorned with a κρώβυλος and resembling a tiara (the
various forms of which are well known). εἴρω, twist, favours ‘coil’; but, if the pins had a bend in them, we can understand ἔνερσις. (The v.l. ἐν ἔρσει is prob. a false division like ἐν roug for ἐντομῇ, c. 93, 5.) Cf. Aristoph. Eg. 1325, Nub. 984.
28. ἀφ᾽
ob—'from
this circumstance.’
It is likely that
Thuc. is mistaken in saying that the Athenians carried the fashion to Asia Minor, and that it spread rather from the Ionians
(Carians, Lydians) to the Athenians. PAGE
1. ἐπὶ wodt—temporal. (a—this may mean had
that
Cf. Herod. v. 88.
6.
the
Dorians
too for a time
worn the ‘ Ionian ' dress ; but more probably Thuc. in μετρίᾳ
aud és τὸν νῦν τρόπον thought rather of the Athenians, and meant merely that the Spartans originated the * Dorian ' χιτών.
146
THUCYDIDES
I
4. ἰσοδίαιτοι with πρὸς τοὺς πολλούς. τὰ μείζω, which is unusual for τὰ πλείω, is thought to refer to the fact that land was the sole form of wealth in early Sparta.
6. phrase
de
τὸ for
φανερὸν
ἀποδύντες---ἐς
‘openly,’
‘in
suggestive of motion. és τὸ φ. ἐνεγκεῖν
public,
with
φ.
is
verbs
&
standing
of motion.
or
The simplest form of phrase is such as
(Hyperid.
strains the use of the prep. AGra—' with
τὸ
oil, frequent
1. v. 3), but Thuc., in Homer.
as so often,
It is generally ex-
plained as instrumental case, but K. W. Krüger calls it interna accus.
ToU—in company with, 1.e. ‘when they . .,' as iii. 59, 8 βίου κίνδυνος ἐγγὺς μετ᾽ αὐτοῦ (sc. τοῦ τελευτᾶν λόγου). 7. ἠλείψαντο---τεϊεχίυε mid. like λούομαι, ὁπλίζομαι, and other words of the toilet. 8. Svalépuara — 7/7. 23, 683 ζῶμα δέ ol πρῶτον παρακάββαλεν. 10. πέπανται —sc. τὸ διαζώματα. ἔχοντας ἀγωνίζεσθαι. The order is ἔτι δὲ καὶ νῦν ἐν τοῖς B. ἔστιν οἷς (-Ξ ἐνίοις), καὶ μάλιστα (ev) τοῖς ᾿Ασιανοῖς. In thenom. plur. always εἰσὶν οἵ, ai ; in oblique cases always ἔστιν ὧν etc. in Thuc., unless words intervene, as in vii. 25 ἦσαν τῶν σταυρῶν obs. 12. ἄθλα τίθεται xa( — ἄθλων τιθεμένων.
18. πολλὰ . . ópovórporra —internal accus. to διαιτώμενον. 16. ὅσαι
μέν
xTÀ. — "This
clause
(down
to
ἰσχύος) is really subordinate to αἱ δὲ παλαιαί κτλ. most recent cities,' etc.," Forbes.
17. πλωιμωτέρων
Üvrov—' when
ἕκαστοι
* Whereas the
navigation
was
easier,’
impers. gen. abs. corresponding to πλωιμώτερα ἐγένετο 8, 2. It is ἃ question whether περιουσίας. . ἔχουσαι goes closely with πλωιμωτέρων
belongs
ὄντων,
so
to ἐκτίζοντο:
that
c. 8
καί
joins
vewrara
καταστάντος
τοῦ
to
ἔχουσαι,
Μίνω
or
ναντικοῦ
πλωιμώτερα ἐγένετο (i.e. as early as Minos) favours the former; but c. 88 3 seems to show that Thuc. uses vewrara here vaguely
of cities founded since Minos purged the seas. 20.
ämeAdußavov—‘occupied,’
cutting them
off from the
mainland with walls. The change of subject from the placenames to their inhabitants is common, e.g. vi. 48; 74, 1; 76, 2;
88,8;
94, 1.
21. &acrot—in this place because it goes closely with πρὸς τοὺς προσοίκους.
On the order of ἕνεκα see D, 1.
NOTES
147
22. ἐπὶ moAd—temporal. 23. On ἀντίσχουσαν (= διὰ τὸ τὴν X. ἀντίσχειν) see 6, 2 1. 19. 24. καὶ dv—the art. not repeated, as often in Thuc. (6, 1), even when the two members are contrasted.
25. Éb«pov—sc. ol λῃστεύοντες. They plundered not only one another but those who, though not sea-farers, lived on the coasts (= παραθαλάσσιοι ἦσαν).
PaGE 7. 1. ol vnewsrar—the
island
barbarians
were
pirates
οὐχ
ἧσσον ἢ ot EAAnves.
3. dkncav— previous to the time of Minos. AfXov—in 426 8.6. ; iii. 104. The ‘proof’ applies only to the Carians,
whence
it may
be inferred that the presence
of Phoenicians in the islands was questioned by none. 6. ὑπὲρ ἡμισύ --- subject, 2 πλείους τῶν ἡμίσεων (though course it might be taken as adverbial).
of
7. τῇ σκευῇ τῶν brÀAoy—lit. ‘their equipment (consisting) of arms,’ not ‘the style of their arms.’
9. Here Thuc. resumes from c. 4. πλωιμώτερα éyfvero—the neut. plur. as in 7, 1. 10. ἐκ τῶν νήσων --ἐκ for ἐν by (the regular attraction to the verb.
method
of)
11. ὅτεπερ---᾿ namely, when,’ referring back to c. 4. 12,
of παρὰ
θάλασσαν---οἴ.
ol παρ᾽ ἔπαλξιν
ii. 13, 5, παρά
with dat. not being used of inanimates except when persons are
clearly implied. 15. τείχη περιεβάλλοντο--τοίοττίηρ existence,
but hitherto without walls:
to
cities
already
in
hence not as in c. 7.
ὡς πλονσιώτεροι ἑαντῶν y.—the omission of αὐτοί in this idiom
is rare:
‘as was natural, since they were now growing
wealthier than they had been hitherto.’ 16. γάρ refers to βεβαιότερον ᾧκουν. The double re presents the same process under two different aspects. 18. 8ovAe(ay—' dependence,’
as
often;
so with
δουλεύειν.
The weaker states became tributaries of the stronger.
περιουσίας
Ixovres— usually
wealth at their command’ and
rendered
‘because
they
had
used it to extend their power;
148
THUCYDIDES
I
but more probably, ‘having funds in hand ' and being anxious to increase them. The more the funds increased, the more eager would they be to increase them still further.
20. ἐν τούτῳ. . Üvres—' when they had now advanced to this condition,’ ie. navigated the seas and were grown richer.
21. ὕστερον xpóvq— ' in course of time.’ 22.
"A.
τέ
μοι Boxe. —'and
so
it seems
to
me
that
it
was because,' etc.
23. οὗ τοσοῦτον
(ὅσον
προύχων) with
ἄγων, ‘not
so much
because he was leader of . ., they being bound by their oaths to T.' Tyndareus, Helen's supposed father, made her suitors swear to protect the rights of that one whom she should choose. 26.
Thuc.
supports
his view
by
reference
to
the
origin
of the kingship in Atreus' house. 27. IIlAorovvmelav—masc., with oi, ‘those of the Pel. who have received the truest account by tradition.' For the order of the gen. edd. compare c. 48, 4; 126, 11. It is supposed that Thuc. means the Argives, whose legends the Lesbian historian Hellanicus related. A fragment of H. gives the story here referred to. Pace
8.
3. τὴν ἐπωνυμίαν. . axeiv—lit. ‘secured the naming of the country after himself, though a stranger.' ἔπηλυν —there is no authority for the form ἐπηλύτης in Attic. The passage in Xen. Oec. cited in L. & S. is corrupt. 4. pe(Qo —neut. plur. ; tvvevex8fvac, ‘fell to the lot of,’ as often in Herod. ; after Thuc. not
5. EüpvcoOéos
pe
x«rÀ.—the
mentioned is as follows :—
Perseus
|
Sthenelus m. Nicippe Eurystheus
found in Attic.
relationship Pelops | Chrysippus
of
the persons
|
Atreus
|
Agamemnon
ἐν τῇ Arrıwn — according to the story, Eurystheus was killed in the Megarid (Euripides represents him as taken prisoner) when at war with Demophon, king of Athens, from
NOTES whom
he had demanded
149
the surrender of the Heraclidae.
Megarid was then part of Attica. 7. καὶ
ἐπιτρέψαντος
Eó.— there
is
parataxis
The
here
ior
'Arpet δὲ μητρὸς ἀδελφῷ ὄντι ἐπιτρέψαντος.
10.
Χρυσίππον-- Atreus and Thyestes conspired and mur-
dered 12. xOnvac 13.
Ch. their half-brother. kal. . mapakaßeiv—co-ordinate with ἔτι μείζω ξυνενε. . ᾿Ατρεῖ. καὶ ἅμα —-the καί joins δοκοῦντα to βουλομένων.
δννατόν
—i.e. in point of wealth.
17. &—the wealth and power of the two families.
18. καὶ ναυτικῷ ἴδ Mas. give καὶ ναυτικῷ Te, and two explanations are suggested: (1) re— too, Shilleto; and (2) re— and, while καί emphasises γαυτικῷ. vi. 44 xal πρός re τοὺς 'Ρηγίνους, viii.
68, 2 xal αὐτός Te, ib. 76, 5 xai ἑαυτούς
re give rise to a
similar question. The use of re is supported by examples in Herod. and tragedy ; but the Ms. variants and certain examples of corruption in the case of re are so numerous that it is very doubtful if the passages can be relied on. δέ — and moreover is more probable.
On the whole xal . .
19. lox voras—ingressive. 20. o9 . . τὸ πλέον f = ἧσσον ff.
χάριτι.
. φόβῳ — for the contrast cf. Demosth.
20 ὃ 16
μείζων ὁ τοῦ μέλλοντος φόβος τῆς παρούσης χάριτος, but there it
is the fear and good-will fe/t ; here it is the feelings inspired. 21. φαίνεται qáp—the
passages referred to are 77. ii. 576
τῶν ἑκατὸν νεῶν ἦρχε κρείων ᾿Αγαμέμνων, γάρ σφιν δῶκεν ἄναξ ἀνδρῶν ᾿ΑὙαμέμνων
aud ii. 610 ff. αὐτὸς
| νῆας, and so on.
23. 6$ . . ToUro—Shilleto refers to Plat. 7heaet. 193 D 8 ἐν rois πρόσθεν οὕτως ἔλεγον for a similar redundancy.
Te—‘in any one's opinion.”
To τεκμηριῶσαι supply τοῦτο:
it is only with ref. to the details that Thuc. suggests a doubt.
24. ἐν τοῦ σκήπτρον τῇ παραδόσει--ἰῇ the passage where the sceptre of Agamemnon is said to have been transmittel through his family ; ZZ. ii. 101 If. For this method of referring to passages in times before the division into books, etc. was made cf. c. 10, 4; St. Mark xii. 26 ἐπὶ τῆς βάτου ; Ep. Rom. xi. 2.
26. οὐκ ἂν.
éxpdra-—‘he would not have been ruler’ (as
150
THUCYDIDES
he was).
Classen’s version,
ruler,’ is less likely.
‘he would
I not be (in the Jliad\
27. οὐκ ἂν εἶεν —M.T. § 238. PAGE
9.
2. καὶ ταύτῃ τῇ στρατείᾳ. -1.6. this expedition itself was not on a very large scale: all the more insignificant must have
been those undertakings that preceded it. 4. ὅτι pély—lit. ‘that M. was a small place, or if an
of the towns of those days seems now insignificant—(this) coul not be considered a valid argument for refusing to believe that,’ etc. (1) The clauses introduced by ὅτι and εἰ form the object to χρώμενος.
(2) The μέν is not regularly answered, but is resumed
in οὐκ οὖν ἀπιστεῖν χρή (ὃ 3) after a long parenthesis.
(3) ἦν
may mean ‘was before its destruction,’ which is said by later
writers to have occurred in 468 B.c. (there is no sufficient ground for doubting the statement). This is supported by vi» δοκεῖ which refers to towns still in existence, Or it may be ‘ was in heroic times,’ and this is supported by τότε. But, which-
ever
be meant,
the argument
is not affected.
The
simple
explanation of the insignificance of Mycenae—now of prime importance to the archaeologist—is that the only part that could be called ‘city’ was the acropolis, and that was occupied by the castle of the chief. The rest of the settlement consisted of the villages of the clans; and there is no sign that in
historic times the villages ever gave way to a city. Thuc. represents the fact correctly. 9. λόγος κατέχει--- απια obtinet ; ‘tradition affirms.’ Λακεδαιμονίων yap—there were no signs of magnificence about Sparta until after the triumphs of Lysander. Even then, its appearance,
remote from
the world and unfortified,
must have been comparatively insignificant.
It does not seem
clear that Thuc. wrote this passage before 404 B.c.
11. κατασκενῆς---κ. includes everything that makes a place habitable and usable.
Here ‘ buildings.’
13. wpés—‘ in comparison with.’ 14. τῶν πέντε τὰς δύο p.—‘ two-fifths.”
(‘Two of the five
divisions’ is, as Mr. Forbes remarks, wrong.) Of course Messenia is included in Laconia. Notice the way in which
fractions are expressed.
The gen. is omitted when the denomt-
nator is one higher than the numerator—as τὰ τρία μέρη= 3.
15. τῆς £uumaons—roughly speaking.
In ii. 9 Thuc. ex-
NOTES
151
presely notes that Argos was not under the leadership of Sparta. ut the omission
here is of no importance, because we do not
Want an exact statement, but a general
account of the power
of Sparta. 16.
τῶν ἕξω £.
—' their allies beyond P., who are many.’
17. wéXeog—for τῆς πόλεως, ‘since the city was not compactly built.” For viii. 95, 2. continuously poviwy—and φαίνοιτ᾽ ἄν. has not been
the omission of art. Steup compares iv. 18, 3 and (Mr. Forbes's rendering ‘when a city is not built ’ is disproved by the fact that ἡ δύναμις Aaxedanot the power of any city—must be supplied to Herbst’s view that πόλεως is predicative—* since it brought together into a compact city '—is incon-
sistent with Λακεδαιμονίων ἡ πόλις above.)
18. kararkevats—the plur. in concrete sense, as in ii. 65, 2. 21. διπλασίαν. . #—these compds. are constructed as comparatives :
πολλαπλάσιοι
τῶν
ἐναντίων
iv.
94;
πολλα-
πλάσιοι 7) ἦλθον ib. 197 ; διπλάσια δοῦναι 7) ἄλλῳ τινί Lysias 19.
22. εἰκάζεσθαι depends on οἶμαι. ἀπὸ τῆς φ. SWews—not ‘from the notable or striking appearance’ (Forbes) but ‘from the mere (external) appearance.’ φανερός is, as usual, what is seen, and ὄψις is the appearance in contrast with the reality, as in vi. 31 τῇ ὄψει ἀνεθάρσουν (where my rendering ‘by the sight’ is also wrong).
26. gievorm yet.’
piv
y.—‘proved,
it
is
true’
δέ---' δηὰ
For τῶν πρὸ αὐτῆς cf. 1, 1.
λειπομένην with gen. as vi. 72 οὐδενὸς λειπόμενος. Pace
10.
l. #v—rel. to στρατείαν. According to the regular principle in Greek, the following clause, to which the nom. is supplied from ἥν, is without the rel. In the second clause the rel. is
often replaced by the required case of αὐτός or obros—ii. 4, 5,
ὃ ἣν τοῦ τείχους καὶ al θύραι ἀνεωγμέναι ἔτνχον αὐτοῦ. vil. 29, 5 ὅπερ μέγιστον ἦν καὶ ἄρτι ἔτυχον οἱ παῖδες εἰσεληλυθότες. It is the repetition of the rel. that is unusual, as in vi. 4, 3 τὸ χωρίον οὗ
νῦν ἡ πόλις ἐστὶ καὶ
first clause
is neg.
and
ὃ πρῶτον
ἐτειχίσθη.
the second
pos.,
If, however,
the
the rel. must be
repeated, as in ii. 43, 2 οὐκ ἐν ᾧ κεῖνται μᾶλλον, ἀλλ᾽ ἐν ᾧ ἡ δόξα
καταλείπεται.
The same omission or substitution is frequent in
Lat., as Liv. xxiii. 8 cum quo steterat nec cum patría majestas
sententia. demiterat. In Engl. cf. Hooker, Eccles. Pol. * Whom though to know be life, and joy to make mention of His name.’
1δῶ
THUCYDIDES
Johnson,
Tour in Heb.
I
'we treated her with great respect,
which she received as custoinary, and was neither elated by ἐδ nor confused.” Macaulay, Warren Hastings ‘To whom she scemed to listen, but did not hear them.’
ἐπὶ τὸ μεῖτον Koop fioa:—‘ exaggerate by using his fancy.’ 3. ἐνδεεστέρα.---’ comparatively insignificant.’ πεποίηκε yap—‘out of a fleet of 1200 ships the poet has described those of the B. as carrying 120 men (ἐν δὲ ἑκάστῃ | κοῦροι Βοιωτῶν ἑκατὸν xal εἴκοσι βαῖνον Il. ii. 510), and those of Ph. as carryiug 50 (ἐρέται δ᾽ ἐν ἑκάστῃ πεντήκοντα | ἐμβέβασαν, τόξων εὖ εἰδότες Idı μάχεσθαι ib. 719), specifying the largest and the smallest.’ ἀν is gen. of measure, as in τεῖχος ἑπτὰ σταδίων, almost confined to expressions of magnitude. The absence of a second art. with ἐλαχίστας is interesting:
Shilleto rightly compares Aesch. Ag. 314 νικᾷ δ᾽ ὁ πρῶτος xal
τελευταῖος δραμών, where the reference is to a team, of which every member wins ; just as here the two things combined are items
of one
fleet.
As
to the
numbers,
average complement of a trireme was 200.
in
Thuc.’s time
the
Therefore a fleet of
1200 would require 240,000 men : but the rationalistic calculation of Thuc. gives about 103,000 for the Trojan War. Of course 103,000 18 a far larger number than was sent out by any
one state in the time of Thuc.
The number of men who sailed
for Sicily in 415 B.c. may be roughly set down as 36,000. But 85 shows that Thuc. thinks of the combined forces of all Greek
states, and the forces in the field during
the Peloponnesian War
would exceed bis calculation for the Trojan
War.
(It seems,
above. 9, dy—as above.
ἐν νεῶν καταλόγῳ
nevertheless, that Thuc. has not made out a very satisfactory case : τῶν νῦν in ὃ 3 should have been qualified.) 7. ἄλλων depends on μεγέθους. 8. abrepérar—-the fighting men served also as rowers. This was quite unusual in Thuc.'s day. See 71. 719 quoted ἐν.
. παραδόσει
c. 9, 4, and
11. weplvews—the only passengers would be the kings and those immediately under them. 13. μέλλοντας. . Exovras— though these agree with περίνεως, they apply in sense equally to all the Greeks. We should expect gen. abs.
14. μετὰ oxevév—the want of space is what Thuc. alludes to.
The room not taken up by the rowers would be filled with
materials.
NOTES 15.
153
κατάφαρκτα ---ἰ.6. the boats had no gangways projecting
along them. These gaugways (πάροδοι) were used only in ships with a deep draught, and Thuc. means that, as there were none in ‘Homeric’ ships, those ships can have had only a
small draught, and therefore there was not much room in them. At intervals along the πάροδοι were upright posts,
&nd the open spaces between could be closed with curtains (rapappóuara) in battle or rough weather, and thus served in a trireme to protect the bodies of the thranitae (top set of rowers). The word is generally explained ‘decked’; but so far as one can judge, the. only connexion between κατάστρωμα, the deck from end to end, and κατάφαρκτος is that only Ships that were κατάφαρκτοι had καταστρώματα. The Homeric ships, it is true, had no καταστρώματα, but this is not the point here.
16. 17. person 19.
λῃστικώτερον --- more like pirate craft’ than warships. Tpós—'as compared with.’ σκοποῦντι is dat. of the judging, a frequent use of a partic. ; cf. c. 21, 2 és—' considering that.’
21. alrıov—this predicate, so often in neut. sing. whatever
be gender and number of the subject, is practically a noun. 23. re—answered 81;
by
ἐπειδὴ δέ,
as
e.g. in vi. 88,
1; vii.
and c. 25, 3.
24.
cov —'only
so large
as.’
αὐτόθεν
with
βιοτεύσειν,
‘support itself in the (enemy's) country.’
25. ἀφικόμενοι.“ on their arrival, ie. immediately after they landed. (This passage, from this word to the end of 8 2, is much disputed.) 26. μάχῃ éxpdrnocav—the conjecture ἐκρατήθησαν reduces the
words
τοῖς
ale
. . ὄντες
below
to absurdity ; and
roürres would have to be changed to κρατήσαντες.
xpa-
The Greeks
were able to raise ἃ raınpart because they had won a victory.
τὸ yap— ‘for otherwise.’ to in //. vii. 336
and
433
This rampart is not that referred as
the counsel of Nestor, but one
built
in
the
tenth
year
by
built immediately after the
arrival of the Greeks, though this does not necessitate inserting εὐθύς after ἄν with Dittrich. Similarly the γεωργία τῆς Χερσονήσου below is not heard of in the 7/7. "Thuc. doubtless
got these details from ἃ poem that related the earlier events of the war.
Cf. the Schol. here: ἔρυμα λέγει νῦν οὐχ ὅπερ ἐν τῇ η΄
λέγει “Ὅμηρος
βαρβάρων
γενέσθαι,
emidoouds.
ἀλλὰ
πρότερον
μικρότερον
(Strabo quotes the opinion
διὰ
τὰς
τῶν
of Aristotle
154
THUCYDIDES
I
that the τεῖχος of II. 7, which was so promptly destroyed by Poseidon, was in reality never built.
It seems
impossible that
Thuc. can have had that τεῖχος in mind.) 27. φαίνονται
Bé—this
is δέ in
apodosis,
and
it is here
apparently suggested by the contrast set up by the parenthesis : though they fortified a camp, they did not employ their whole force. This δέ generally follows a parenthesis; but not in ii. 66,
1 ἐπειδὴ
προγνοὺς
ὁ πόλεμος
κατέστη,
ὁ δὲ
φαίνεται καὶ
ἐν τούτῳ
τὴν δύναμιν.
28. ἐνταῦθα---Ὀοίοτο Troy; held out.
and consequently
Pace
the Trojans
11.
2. atrav—‘ of their own accord."
τὰ δέκα tryn—‘ those ten years.’
3. Bla—‘in the field.”
They were not penned up in the
city.
trokatropévorg—iinperf., ‘who at any given time were left behind.’
7. ῥᾳδίως passage
ἂν
μάχῃ.
.
Tpolav
eov — does
this
refer to ‘the two natural stages of the expedition—
attle followed by siege, or two alternative means of taking
Troy,—either by pitched battle outside the gates, or by siege? Those who adopt the first, either (a) bracket the first εἷλον with Krüger as spurious, and explain the δ᾽ alter πολιορκίᾳ as (a violent) apodotic δέ, or, with Krüger bracket it ; or else (5) make the first εἷλον mean, «ot ‘capture (Troy), but, with
Herbst, ‘defeat (the Trojans)'
with
Bauer,
make
μάχῃ
Those who adopt the second
κρατοῦντες — by
superiority
in
the
field,’ and not ‘being as they were superior in the field’ ; and
πολιορκίᾳ προσκαθεζόμενοι =‘ by a regular siege,’ instead of ‘by
rsisting in a siege.” But the difficulties involved in this are insuperable ; for—apart from the extraordinary way in which the supposed alternative methods are expressed, and joined by δέ instead of f—the sense obtained, though at first sight attractive, makes περιουσίαν ἔχοντες τροφῆς and ξυνεχῶς τὸν πόλεμον διέφερον pointless in so far as the first method—
superiority in the field +assault—is concerned ; it necessitates forcing the meaning ‘ by an immediate assault’ (xarà xpdros)
into μάχῃ κρατοῦντες, and thus making this wholly distinct from μάχῃ ἐκράτησαν in § 1; and it strains no less the mean. ing of πολιορκίᾳ προσκαθεζόμενοι. We therefore prefer the
NOTES
155
first plan, but slightly modified ; if the first εἷλον is genuine,
it is probably a mere anticipation of the second. they
had . . carried on the war
Trans. ‘If
persistently, they would easily
have continued superior in the field and have taken the city, seeing that . . : if, then, they had persisted in ἃ siege, they would have taken Troy.’ προσκαθεζόμενοι governs πολιορκίᾳ. 11. dAAd—in contrast with περιουσίαν εἰ ἦλθον ἔχοντες τροφῆς. rovray—i.e. τῶν Τρωικῶν. 18. τῶν mplv—c. 1, 1; 10, 3.
γενόμενα--- ‘though it proved.’ 15. xareoynxéros—attributive.
When an attributive partic.
18 itself further defined —5ià τοὺς ποιητὰς xar.—it is frequently
laced outside the art. huc.
This idiom is by no means confined to
16. μετανίστατο --- ‘Greece (ie. the Greeks) was still occupied with migration and settlement, so that the country did not quiet down (ingressive) and so increase.’ "EAAds here is used as in c. 6, for the Greek nation—7 'E. ἐσιδηροφόρει---πὰ this explains
(a) the use of ueravíeraro,
(b) the accus.
ἡσυχά-
caca», for which, as it refers to the subject of the main verb, ἡσυχάσασα would be expected. ‘EAAds takes a slightly different meaning after the ὥστε. A similar change of meaning may be detected
in vii. 34, 6 ναυμαχήσαντες
δὲ ἀντίπαλα
xal ὡς αὐτοὺς
ἑκατέρους ἀξιοῦν νικᾶν, where the ws-clause is general in sense,
‘the way in which both sides lay claim to victory.’ 17. ὥστε μὴ ἡ. abó£n8sva.—the μή belongs to both partic.
and infin., and ὥστε. . αὐξηθῆναι expresses ἀχρηματία. 20.
ἐνεόχμωσε-- ἐνεωτέρισε.
In sense this is pluperf.
verb occurs in Herod., but only here in Attic.
The
Thuc. thought
of the fate of Agamemnon, Teucer, and other heroes. καὶ ordocas—two things are not clear, (1) whether the disturbances alluded to are intended to be connected with the return
from
Troy, or merely to be an
explanation
of ὥστε μὴ
ἡσυχάσασαν αὐ. ; (2) how Βοιωτοί re γάρ is connected with what precedes. The passage is commonly referred to as though γάρ introduced an illustration of the στάσεις, but Steup (who thinks γάρ spurious) rightly points out that we hear nothing
of στάσις in the matter of the migrations referred to.
If γάρ
is retained, we must assume that the migrations are introduced as an illustration of the general unrest that continued ; i.e. the
γάρ refers rather to 8 1 than sentence.
to the immediately
preceding
156
THUCYDIDES
I
21. ὡς ἐπὶ wodkv—‘ for the most part,’ ‘in most cases.’ ab óàv—.'as the result of which,’ referring to στάσεις. 22. τὰς mö\as— prob. the article is distributive=cities
in
each instance. (Others, ‘the well-known cities’: but this is rightly objected to by several edd. as'a strange assumption of
knowledge and as clashing awkwardly with ἐν ταῖς πόλεσιν.) 23. ol viw—meaning not that the Boeotians had changed
their name,
but
the
Boeotians
‘as we know them
now,’ i.e. as
inhabiting all Boeotia, instead of dwelling partly in Thessaly
and partly iu Boeotia.
ἑξηκοστῷ Ira—the instances seem to be chosen in order to show that disturbances continued for a long period after the war. M ois 'IAtov &Aecw—the art. replaced by a gen., as in da vov πλῆθος c. 1, 2.
26. &vobacpós—i.e. a part that had voluntarily separated from the main body, not ἀνάσταντες, like the rest. The word only here in Attic; but cf. Φωκέες ἀποδάσμιοι Herod. i. 146.
27. ἀφ᾽ àv —the plur. xarà σύνεσιν. The ref. is to ZZ. ii. 494, where the Boeotians, however, possess the chief cities of Boeotia. Pace
2.
lex ov—cf.
3. ἡσυχάσασα
12.
σχεῖν, c. 9, 2.
B«eBalws—‘ gaining
longer subject to violent changes.’ and imperf. combined.
unbroken
rest and
no
Notice the ingressive aor.
δ. "Ievas—the Ionian cities of Asia Minor. vyewray—the Cyclades ; cf. c. 4. Isocr. Panath. 43. 6. *Iradlas—i.e. the modern Calabria, the peninsula reaching to the Laus on W. and to Metapontum on E. ‘The chief Peloponnesian founders of Sicilian and Italian cities were the Corinthians who founded Syracuse, and through Svracuse, Camarina [Acrae and Casmenae], the Megarians who founded the Hyblaean Megara, and through Megara, Selinus: the Achaeans who founded Sybaris and Croton, some Lacedaemonians who founded Tarentum,' (Forbes). But (1) Megara is not part of the Peloponnese (ii. 9), see next note; (2) it is not clear that Tarentum is reckoned in Italy. 8. ἔστιν ἃ xepla—it is supposed that the colonies of Corinth in the W., Corcyra, Leucas, Ambracia, etc. are referred
NOTES
157
to. Ifso (1) τὸ πλεῖστον above is an exaggeration ; (2) Ἑλλάς is here used for all the country ultimately inhabited by Greeks—as in Thuc.'s time: but ᾿Ελλάς was not so used above ; (3) the vagueness of the reference
to these
Steup gets over all these difficulties by nom.,
80
that
the
Megarian
(see
colonies
is strange.
taking ἔστιν ἃ χωρία as fast
note)
Locrian
and
Chalcidian colonies would be included. This is tempting, and for the use of χωρία we might compare vii. 14 τὰ τρέφοντα ἡμᾶς χωρία τῆς ᾿Ιταλίας, ὁρῶντα ἐν ᾧ ἐσμεν. But it must be confessed that (1) ἔστιν & looks like an antithesis to τὸ πλεῖστον : (2) πάντα δὲ ταῦτα appears to refer to ἔστιν ἃ χωρία as well as
to
the
colonies
mentioned
before.
Perhaps
Thuc.
writes
somewhat vaguely here.
11. ἔτι. . ἢ wpdérepov—referringto c. 8, 3. 12. τὰ πολλά ---“ in most cases.’ 13. τῶν προσόδων p. yıyvontvav—this goes closely καθίσταντο,
‘tyrannies were
with
established where the revenues (of
the government) increased.’ But öwarwrepas . . ποιουμένης is a general statement with regard to Greece, and qualifies th» whole sentence down to dvreixovro. Thuc. means that a tyranny was general'y established in & city enjoying a large
revenue, which one man, whether & member of the governing class or not, succeeded in getting into his hands as the result of political agitation. 14. πρότερον S4—not necessarily immediately before, for in most cases oligarchy preceded tyranny, but ‘in earlier days’ where one man ruled,
his power was limited.
ἐπὶ ῥητοῖς ylpaci—‘ with’ (under the condition of) ‘fixed prerogatives,’ viz. as priest, judge and leader (Arist. Pol. lii. 14, 12). The purpose of this parenthesis is to point out that the rule of a single man, though it was known before the age of the tyrants, had been of a wholly different character.
The age of the tyrants synchronises with an advance in Greece ; yet the deeds even of the tyrants were relatively insignificant. As to tyranny,
Aristotle agrees with
γενόμενοι ἐχρηματίζοντο γενέσθαι τὰς ὀλιγαρχίας μετέβαλον.
Thuc.:
ἐπεὶ δὲ χείρους
ἀπὸ τῶν κοινῶν, ἐντεῦθέν ποθεν εὔλογον . . ἐκ δὲ τούτων πρῶτον εἰς τυραννίδας
17. éyyorara—superlative of ἐγγύς. Cf. prope and propius. 18. peraxaplaaı—Thuc., like Herod., uses the act. of this word, whereas other authors use mid.
19. καὶ. . νανπηγηθῆναι--καίΞ- ‘and in fact,’ the building of ἃ trireme marking a climax in naval affairs (rà περὶ τὰς vais),
158
THUCYDIDES
I
τῆς Ελλάδος goes with πρῶτον : cf. ii. 18 ἀφίκετο τῆς ᾿Αττικῆς és Οἰνόην πρῶτον. Herod. i. 168 πρώτῃ δὲ Φωκαίῃ ᾿Ιωνίης ἐπεχείρησε. —The rerphpns made its appearance in the second half
of the fourth cent., and was the normal type of ship hellenistic period. It is not likely that it had four
in the of
oars. 29. vaßs— whether appear.
these
were
triremes
or
not
does
not
23. τοῦδε τοῦ woAduov—tlıe dates given are circ. 704 and 664 5.c. (or, if the Archidamian War xxvi, circ. 721 and 681 B.c.). 94.
is meant, see Introd. p.
Sre—‘ since.’
Σαμίοις AAGe—the dat. after (simple) verbs of motion is common in tragedy, but does not ocour in Attic prose outside Thuc. ; cp. c. 27, 1;
61, 1;
107, 7.
25. γίγνετα. ---' turns out to be.’ 26. καὶ ratryp—lit. ‘this too reckons 260 years.’ The καί brings the battle into relation with the event above. (Thuc. seems to be maintaining the priority of Corinth against some other claimant.) The ταύτῃ is possessive dat., as Herod. ii. 145 "HpaxXéi ὅσα φασὶ εἶναι ἔτεα ἐς Αμασιν. PaazE
13.
1. τὴν πόλιν.--- their city.’ 2. alel δή wore—as δή wore means ‘in the past’ (frequent in tragedy), so αἰεὶ δή vore — always in the past, i.e. ‘from the earliest times.’ 3. τῶν “Ελλήνων. . druucryévrev—two points are made: (1) the early commerce of the Greeks was carried on mainly by land, (2) the Isthmus was on the high-road between ol ἐντός and
ol &w II. The sentence would be much clearer with a partic. like πορενομένων, as proposed by Steup, after Ἑλλήνων, 80 that
τε would mean ‘ and.’
ἢ. ἀφνειόν--στὸ have only one instance, Ji. ii. 570. 9. μᾶλλον ἔπλῳζον--οἴ, c. 8, 2. τὰς ναῦς --ἰἢ6 ships referred to in § 2. These enabled Greece to extinguish piracy, and thus to further her commerce ; and the outcome of that, it is implied, was the formation of a considerable fleet.
11. ἀμφότερα with παρέχοντες,
‘in both ways, i.e. as the
NOTES context shows, by sea and land. do not
of tliemselves
mean
159 ἀμφότερα and κατ᾽ ἀμφότε
*on
both elements,'
but show
the
same accus. as τοῦτον τὸν τρόπον, and κατὰ πολλοὺς τρόπους. is the context that gives the special meaning. lox ov—ingressive.
It
12. "Ieew — those of Asia Minor, among Phocaeans and Samos are specially mentioned.
whom
the
13. ἐπὶ K ópov— 556-529 p.c. 16. Κύρῳ Harpagus.
πολεμοῦντες --- they were ultimately reduced by Cf. c. 16.
17. ἐπὶ Kayfocov—C.
reigned
529-521
s.c.
Polycrates
ruled 532-521 B.c. According to Herod. iii. 164, Samos was πολίων πασέων πρώτη Ἑλληνίδων καὶ βαρβάρων in the time of Polycrates.
19. ἹΡηνείαν éày—Herod. iii. 39 assigns far more imposing achievements to Polycrates: cf. ib. 122 τῆς δὲ ἀνθρωπίνης (i.e. not ‘heroic,’ like Minos) λεγομένης
γενεῆς Πολυκράτης πρῶτος,
ἐλπίδας πολλὰς ἔχων Ἰωνίης
νήσων
re kal
ἄρξειν.
This gift
was made to the Delian Apollo as the Ionian deity. 21. Μασσαλίαν olk(fovres—* at the time when they founded
Massilia.' Herod. i. 166 gives an account of a victory of the Etruscans and Carthaginians about 546 B.c., the time of which Thuc. is here speaking. But Eusebius and others placed the foundation of Marseilles 600 R.c. : there is plainly a discrepanc in the dates given for its foundation. (Classen in the 8rd ed.
took ἐνίκων to mean ‘gained victories,’ and referred them to 600 B.c. ; but Thuc. is plainly referring to circ. 546 B.c.
Steup's appendix.) 22. ταῦτα γάρ — ‘these,
in
fact,
were
the
See
strongest
navies,' i.e. the strongest possessed by Ionians (cf. $ 6). 28. φαίνεται with χρώμενα and fleets were built . . we find’ etc.
ἐξηρτυμένα : ‘though
these
25. mevrixovrdpows— Gardner and Jevons, p. 652. It is plain from Herod. i. 163 that penteconters counted as νῆες μακραί͵ and stand in contrast to νῆες στρογγύλαι, merchant-ships (cf. Thuc. ii. 97, 1). Therefore the πλοῖα μακρά are doubtless long ships of larger and smaller size than penteconters. To
their resemblance in síze to merchant-ships
the word πλοῖα
seems to point. 26. ἐκεῖνα —those existing in the time of the Trojan War.
27. τοῦ Δαρείον θανάτον.-4856 s.c.
rather than ‘became king.’
ἐβασίλενσε,
‘reigned,’
160
THUCYDIDES
I
29. περί τε Σικελίαν —for the vague use of περί cf. Isocr. v. 111 εἶχε μεγίστην δύναμιν τῶν περὶ τὴν ᾿Ασίαν. This is the age of the great Sicilian tyrants—Thero, Gelo, Hiero. 30. ds πλῆθος ¢yévovro—‘ reached a considerable number’ ;
probably the lit. sense is ‘came to.’ PAGE
14.
8. εἴ τινες ἄλλοι---55.. ἐκέκτηντο ναυτικά. 4. Bpaxda—sc. ναυτικά, ‘small fleets.’ This sense of βραχύς is frequent in Thuc.
5. τὰ πολλά —'the greater part of these consisted of.’ ὀψέ τε Gd ob—sc. j»,.'it was late when.’ For d$ ob we should expect ὅτε:
started to
but instead of saying ‘already when they
build, it was so late that they could not
get a strong
fleet before the invasion of Xerxes,’ he says ‘from
the time that
they started ' etc. 82
B.C., the
The building of the ships took place in 483-
archonship
of Nicodemus,
and the invasion
in
480 B.c. Herod. vii. 144 does not say that Them. looked forward to a Persian invasion when he advised the building of the ships. It is thought that Herod. wanted to belittle Them. 9. ἐναυμάχησαν ---αἴ Salamis. διὰ πάσηε---“ throughout,’ an adverbial expression like ἀπὸ τῆς
ἴσης
c. 15;
ἀπὸ
(ris)
πρώτης,
etc.
(This
is better
than
supplying νεώς.)
10. xaracrpépara—the Homeric ship was covered only fore and aft, the part in which the men rowed being open. (Cf. on c. 10, 4.)
12. rà παλαιά — i.e. the
early fleets mentioned in c. 18.
τὰ ὕστερον γενόμενα. —i.e. those mentioned in c. 14 § 3.
14. οὐκ ἐλαχίστην ---᾿ considerable,’ in spite of smallness of the fleets. atvrote—rois ναυτικοῖς.
μάτων
Tpocóbo—see c. 18 § 5.
The possession
of a
fleet enabled them still further to increase their trade.
16. τὰς vhoovs
«x.—‘ began
to’ or ‘endeavoured to reduce
the islands.’ The enterprise of Athens and Corinth is alluded to, as in (ἐκεῖνοι) ὅσοι μή.
18. ὅθεν τις— ‘as the result of which
any
considerable
force was brought together,’ or ‘from which any considerable
power was gained.’
This seems to be the meaning, corresponding
NOTES to loxiv δὲ κτλ. above.
regularly
means
161
But παραγίγνομαι in Thuc.
‘be assembled
‘come to the support of.’
‘To
of troops
in the field,’ and with dat.
be added to’ is προσγίγνομαι.
Hence many edd. render ‘in consequeuce of which any considerable force was collected.' ὅθεν is then strange. ξυνέστη — frequently used in this connexion from Herod. downwards. 22. οὐ γὰρ {uvaortxerav—‘they were not joined to the strongest states as subjects, nor yet did they of their own accord unite on an equal footing for a campaign.’
25. κατ᾽ G\AfAovs—inier se. ὡς ἕκαστοι ---οὗ. c. 3 $ 4. Strictly ἐπολέμουν is supplied with es, but the phrase practically becomes a distributive numeral. 27. Χαλκιδέων καὶ 'Éperpiéy — the date of this war, fonght for the possession of the Lelantian plain, is unknown. Herod. says that Samos helped Chalcis and Miletus helped Eretria, and
other allies. rivalry.
of course
both sides must have attracted many
The ultimate cause of the war was commercial
(Busolt i. p. 818.) PaGE
15.
1. καὶ rd ἄλλο 'E. —‘ the rest of the Greeks also took sides as allies of the one or the other.’
2. tweyévero—often of unfavourable occurrences, especially of anything sudden and unexpected, such as natural phenomena. 8. &4AXo&.—' in different parts.’ pfy—according to the constr. with verbs of hindrance (M. 7. 749, 807), though
4. xa(—*'and προχωρησάντων
κωλύω generally has the simple infin.
in particular.'—Iee and by éweorpárevoe.
is governed both by There is an anacoluthon
at ἐπεστράτευσε, for strictly ἐπεγένετο should govern “Iwo: with an abstract noun parallel to κωλύματα for its subject. 6. βασιλεία.---Μ88. authority is altogether in favour of this against ἐξουσία, and ἐξουσία does not seem to occur before Aristotle in this sense. Stahl thinks βασιλεία is ἃ gloss on
ἐξουσία. But it is possible that ἐξουσία itself is a gloss. The matter is complicated by the fact that both βασιλεία and
ἐξουσία have 8 double sense (ἐξουσία, *power to do & thing,' a ‘power’; cf. βασιλεία τὸ ἀξίωμα καὶ τὸ ἔθνος βασιλευόμενον, Suidas) Of course here the sense is concrete.
162
THUCYDIDES ov —the
destruction
of the
I Lydian
monarchy
was
546 B.c., Herod. i. 87 etc.
ca —28 part. of εἰμί is constantly omitted after ὅσος. ἐντὸς "AXvos ποταμοῦ — ἐντός from the Greek point of view. When ποταμός is added the art. is regularly inserted before the name of a river in Attic. But Herod. does not use the art., and Thuc. omits it in six passages. The only other known exx. are Anab. iv. 7, 18.
Isocr.
7, 80 (also ἐντὸς
"AAvos v.)
and Xen.
9. καὶ τὰς vf ovs—according to Herod. i. 169, when the Ionian cities of the mainland submitted to Harpagus, the islands islands
would
also was
gave in; but no doubt the submission of the incomplete. Otherwise the rise of Polycrates
be unaccountable.
Thuc.
alludes
to their reduction
after Lade, 494 Β.0.
10. TÓpavvo.—see c. 18 8 1.
The course of the argument
was there broken by the reference to the fleets, which were first dealt with.
ll. τὸ d$ ἑαντῶν—' their own interests.’ 12. τὸ cépa—‘ with regard to their personal good and the increase of their own estate.' σῶμα includes safety and enjoyment. 14. 8
orara.
dodadtdas
.
. μάλιστα-- ὅσον ἐδύναντο
ἀσφαλέ-
‘Had the utmost regard for security in the administra-
tion of their cities,’ i.e. ‘ pursued a cautious policy’ by avoiding
great enterprises.
δι’ ἀσφαλείας is an adverbial phrase,
those with which ἔχειν is usually found, as àv ἐπιμελείας, ἡσυχίας,
like δι᾽
διὰ φυλακῆς.
15. ἀπ᾿ aórév—'on their part.’ 16. εἰ μὴ εἴ τι--εἰ μὴ crit. note).
el, nisi si, only
εἰ μή becomes an adverb.
here
M.T.
17. ol yap—for the use of γάρ cf. c. 14,1. tyrants in fact attained to the greatest
in Thuc.
(see
476, 4.
‘The Sicilian
power,' i.e. greater power
than any other of the tyrants (and they fought against their
neighbours) The sense of πλεῖστον here is that of c. πλεῖστον ἀνθρώπων. There is no need for excision.
18 2 ἐπὶ
18. οὕτω πανταχόθεν —summing up the whole from c. 18. 19. κατείχετο--- was held in check,’ ‘constrained.’ Cf.c.16;
but the second clause, xarà πόλεις re shows that κατείχετο is felt here not as a verb of prevention, but of compulsion.
22. 'A8nvatay —the overthrow of Hippias, 510 B.c.
NOTES
163
23. ol ἐκ $s—the prep. by attraction to κατελύθησαν. ἐπὶ πολὺ kxTÀ.—lit. ‘which over a large area had been under tyrants even before Athens.' The earliest instance was at Sicyon, where Orthagoras became tyrant circ. 670 B.c.
24. ol πλεῖστοι. . Σικελίᾳ —limiting apposition to oi τύραννοι, καὶ. . Σικελίᾳ explaining πλεῖστοι, ‘most of them, the last in fact except those ın Sicily.' In Syracuse the tyrants lasted till 466 B.c., when Thraaybulus was expelled.
25. ὑπὸ Δακεδαιμονίων —the Spartans were called ,ucorÜparvo. Cf. Aristotle, τυραννίδας. But their
Pol. v. 10 Aax. traditional policy
πλείστας κατέλυσαν of tyrant-breaking
was dropped in the fourth cent., when αὐτονομία became their watchword. Thus in 371 B.c. an orator is represented by Xen.
as
taunting
the
Spartans
with
preferring
tyranny
to free
institutions. Alcibiades in his speech at Sparta (vi. 89— winter of 415-4 B.C.) makes a point out of this tradition. 27. τὴν «rlow--strictly speaking the Dorians did not found Sparta: it existed before the invasion ; but there is no difficulty in speaking of the second founders thus. PAGE
16
1. ὧν ἴσμεν — ἐκείνων obs ἴσμεν.
The στάσις
lasted
longer
at Sparta than elsewhere: cf. Herod. i. 65, the Spartans before Lycurgus κακονομώτατοι ἦσαν σχεδὸν πάντων Ἑλλήνων κατά Te σφέας αὐτοὺς καὶ ξείνοισι ἀπρόσμικτοι. In spite of this, they were the earliest to obtain good laws—yeréBador ἐς εὐνομίην (Herod. 1.c.) 2 ηὐνομήθη.
4. Terpakócva —this gives a later date than 884 B.c. which other authorities assign to Lycurgus. 7. 8vváy«vov— δυνατοὶ ὄντες, see L. & S.
8. μετὰ 8{—the main sentence is resumed after the parenthesis.
Cf. the use of δέ (δ᾽ οὖν) in c. 11, 1; οὖν in vii. 42, 3 ;
δέ is frequent. So autem, sed, igitur. τὴν κατάλνσιν ἐκ “Ἑλλάδος —the art. is not repeated with a verbal substantive. The words necessary to complete its sense generally follow, but sometimes precede it, as in ii. 18, 3 κατὰ τὴν ἄλλην
πορείαν ἡ σχολαιότης.
In the
latter case, the prepositional phrase is connected with the verd
of the sentence (cf. ii. 7, 2; 38, 1) as well as with the verbal
substantive. 10. καὶ ἡ ἐν Μαραθῶνι päxn—i.e. now begins the modern period, τὰ Μηδικά.
164
THUCYDIDES
I
12. τῷ 4. ordAg—‘ the great armada.’ 14. ἐπικρεμασθέντοι.---΄ impending,’ as ii. 58, 4; iii. 40, 7. 16. τῶν Evprodqunodvrev —this and ἡγήσαντο are ingressive ; *assumed the leadership of those who entered on the war as allies.’ wpotvyovres—causal.
19. καὶ ἀνασκενασάμενοι. βόντες τὰ σκεύη ἐσέβησαν
importance οἵ ναυτικοὶ
. ἐσβάντες. . ἐγένοντο = ἀναλα-
καὶ ἐγένοντο.
Observe the historical
ἐγένοντο, which
is emphasised
by its
connexion with ἡγήσαντο τῶν ᾿Ελλήνων.
20. ἀπωσάμενοι.
. διεκρίθησαν --ἰἰϊὸ subject
the course of the sentence from *the
modified
in
confederutes' to the con-
federates exclusive of Athens and Sparta, and those Asiatic
cities and islands that revolted from Persia after Salamis.
24. rabra—Athens
and Sparta.
Suddvn—'‘it had become
clear that,’ denoting the singling out of these two from among
the rest.
The aor. in sense of plup. appears in (1) sentences
introduced
by
‘when,’
‘since,’
‘until’
regularly
; (2) in rel.
and other subord. sentences often ; (3) in principal sentences occasionally.
26. dpatxpla—used ὅμαιχμος
by Herod.
and late writers;
the adj.
in 111. 58, 4.
27. Scevey Oévres—open war in 457 B.c., dispute in 461 B.c. Seo c. 103. ἐπολέμησαν ---ἴ1}} the thirty years’ truce 445 B.c. c. 107. PaGE
17.
4. ἤδη tx@pow— ‘now regularly joined these states '—i.e. entered the alliance of Athens or Sparta. Contrast the earlier State of affairs, c. 15, 2 οὐ γὰρ ξυνειστήκεσαν κτλ.
δ. τὰ
μὲν amevöduevor— this should
truces ' ; but we certainly expect ‘being revious sentences Thuc. has descri
mean
‘now
making
now at peace.’ In the the state of affairs (a)
rom the battle of Salamis to 457 B.c., (b) from 457 onwards. Now during period (a) Athens and Sparta were at ce; but
from 466 disputes began between Athens and her allies. During period (b) Athens and Sparta might be said to be 'making truces' (450, 445 B.c.) or making war. The ὥστε therefore seems to refer to what happened from 496 onwards ; but ἀπὸ τῶν Mndcxdv—the
war with
Xerxes to the battle
Plataea (or Mycale) does not agree with this.
of precision in the passage.
of
There is a want
NOTES 7. εὖ παρεσκενάσαντο
τὰ
165
πολέμια --- οὐ Arist
Ath. Pol.
28 of the Athenians, συνέβη τὰ εἰς τὸν πόλεμον ἀσκῆσαι. τὰ πολέμα in the sense of τὰ πολεμικά is found in Herod. and
Hippocrates ; Xen. Anab. i. 6, 1; Arist. Ath. Pol. c. 8 and 23. ll. ἡγοῦντο---86. αὐτῶν.
κατ᾽ ὀλιγαρχίαν σουσι kar -ὀλιγαρχίαν
kTÀ. —i.e. θεραπεύοντες (κατά of manner),
δὲ ὅπως
πολιτεύ-
ἐπιτηδείως σφίσιν
αὐτοῖς
μόνον (‘in their, the Lacedaemonian, interests alone’). Cf. Arist. Pol. iv. 11 τῶν ἐν ἡγεμονίᾳ γενομένων τῆς Ἑλλάδος... ol μὲν δημοκρατίας καθίστασαν, οἱ δ᾽ ὀλιγαρχίας, οὐ πρὸς τὸ τῶν πόλεων συμφέρον σκοποῦντες ἀλλὰ πρὸς τὸ σφέτερον αὐτῶν.
13. ναῦς τε τῶν médeov—having gradually taken (assumed possession of) the ships of the various cities.
over Cf.
c. 99, 3.
16.
καὶ
ἐγένετο
ajrois—two
widely
different views
are
taken of this passage according 88 αὐτοῖς means (a) 'the Athenians’ only or (b) ‘the Athenians and Lacedaemonians.’ Omitting minor differences, we get (a) ‘and so her own
resources for carrying on this war reached a greater strength than (what she had} when she stood at the height of her prosperity side by side with the undamaged forces of her confederates’; i.e. Athens had appropriated the forces of her confederates, as it were, and thus was stronger than when she was at the head of a body of independent allies. (δ) The forces of Athens and Sparta separately were stronger than they had been (both together) during the period of the ὁμαιχμία (Classen) or ‘stronger than the strongest power each separately had wielded with its still undamaged συμμαχία᾽ (Herbst). (a) accords with what Thuc. afterwards says of the growth of Athenian power (cf. c. 118). By τὰ κράτιστα he means the time before the reduction
of Naxos
(466
B.0.).
ξυμμαχία
ἀκραιφνής
is in
contrast with the appropriation of ships and imposition of tribute. (b) with Classen’s rendering is too strong; with Herbst,
we certainly
hardly
feel the
statement, as far 88 it
refers to Sparta, consistent with the reference to her policy made above. 20. τὰ TaÀadÁ —this, as Herbst and Steup point out, refers only to the time before the expulsion of the tyrants—see note on c. 1 8 2 rà yàp πρὸ αὐτῶν κτλ. Thc events of the Persian wars were fully known,
and
in c. 18, 1 Thuc. comes to
them as to modern events. Therefore we must suppose cc. 18 and 19 to form a long parenthesis—see the analysis of the προοίμιον, Intr. III. note. τοιαῦτα — i.e. comparatively insignificant, οὐ μεγάλα.
166
THUCYDIDES
I
χαλεπὰ öyra— ‘though it is difficult to trust every iece of evidence as put forward in the traditions about them. This is the personal constrn. for χαλεπὸν ὃν παντὶ dis r. v. The clause is amplified in what follows, and does not refer to what
has preceded.
wav &fig= ' every one without exception.’
22.
dxods—‘ accounts.’
24.
edis w—the indirect reflexive, which, as regularly used
in subord.
sentences,
refers to subject of principal
sentence.
But later writers generally use ἑαυτούς etc. as both indirect and direct reflex. ópo(es—as events that did not occur in their own place. 25. 4oüy—cf. c. 28 5. Here ‘for example’ (f and there too). “Iewapyov — there is a more detailed account of the matter in vi. 54-59. Herod. v. 55 ; vi. 188; Arist. Ath. Pol. c. 18. There are no discrepancies between this account and the statement of Herod. and Arist. (for the statement in the latter that Thessalus was half- brother of Hipperchus is not necessarily a contradiction of this); but there are several
differences between
the Aristotelian account and the longer
account given in book vi.
PAGE 18. 1
ὑποτοπήσαντές
rı— ‘feeling
some
suspicion.
(Some
connect τί with μεμηνῦσθαι.) ὑποτοπῆσαι used by Thuc. only in aor. inf. or partic. 2. ἐκείνῃ τῇ ἡμέρᾳ καὶ π. with μεμηνῦσθαι, ‘on that great
day at the very moment,' before they were to take action. 9. ἐκ. . peanvboßar—the
ἐκ practically
other places in Thuc. in which
τὸ ὑπό are ii. 49, 1; iii. 69, 1; v. 104 ; vi. 36, 2.
The use is lonic, not found in Aristoph., and there are only doubtful traces of it in the orators. 5. πρὶν ξυλληφθῆναι . . κινδυνεῦσαι— ‘wishing to do something
chance.
before they were arrested (and) then to take their
πρὶν £. goes with $pácarrés τι, and xal=‘on
condition.’ 7. περὶ τὸ Λεωκόρειον.--ἐν
tion), but inside the city. 57) was marshalling the
Pol. however says that the acropolis.
Ceramicus
to
the
μέσῳ τῷ
Κεραμεικῷ
that
(Harpocra-
Meanwhile Hippias (according to vi.
procession outside the
gates.
The Ath.
Hippias was awaiting the procession on
e route of the procession was from the (outer)
temple
of
Athena
Polias.
As for the
NOTES Leocorion, the story Leos were sacrificed
167
was that the three daughters of King to Pallas to avert famine from Athons.
The chapelis connected with the worship of Apollo as god of purification.
9. πολλὰ δὲ καὶ ἄλλα — ‘as regards’;
or (what comes to
the same) οἴονται may be rendered ‘conceive.’
10. οὐ une
idée
χρόνῳ ápvneroóg«va—-'le
grec
renforce
positive
sous
forme
en
la
reprenant
souvent negative’
(Chambry). Cf. p. 1121. 16. 11. ὥσπερ xTÀ. —Herod. vi. 57, if the kings are not present
at a meeting of the Council, (κελεύουσι) τοὺς μάλιστά od τῶν γερόντων προσήκοντας ἔχειν τὰ τῶν βασιλέων γέρεα, δύο ψήφους τιθεμένους, τρίτην δὲ τὴν ἑωυτῶν. It may be that Thuc. is referring to that e, and took it to imply that each king had two votes (though it is doubtful whether Herod. meant that) In ix. 53 Herod. mentions the λόχος Πιτανάτης as
present at Plataea.
It can
hardly
be doubted
that Thuc.
consciously includes Herod. among ol ἄλλοι “EAAnves. The Speeches of Thuc., in Hellenica, p. 273.
See Jebb,
12. μιᾷ Whde—we expect the accus., as in Aesch. Zum. 738 ψῆφον δ' Ὀρέστῃ τήνδ᾽ ἐγὼ προσθήσομαι, but the sense is ‘give their opinion (sc. γνώμην) with one vote.’ (Hum. l.c. does not
support the opiuion of Classen and Steup that the use of the
dat. is to be explained by the fact that the kings voted last.) The errors noted illustrate the difficulty of getting information about Spartan proceedings.
17. ἐκ.
. τεκμηρίων with νομέζων.
The object is (ἐκεῖνα)
& διῆλθον, the pred. τοιαῦτα μάλιστα (εἶναι) (wr, πιστεύων, ἡγησάμενος are co-ordinate;
not the . . the
The partic. voyudbut they express
condition, but means : lit. * However, it is by considering proofs I have given and in the light of them thinking that that one will escape error, and not by preferring to follow embellishments and exaggeratious of poets or the attractive
but untrustworthy
coming
to
the
compositions
conclusion.'
participles as conditional,
of prose writers
Edd.
but μήτε.
generally
. . but by
represent
. μήτε would
the
then
be
required. See Mf. T. § 885. 20. ἐπὶ τό---80 as to please the ear of the public rather than to arrive at the truth.’ The double compar. as regularly where two qualities in the same person or thing are contrasted : ἰὼ στρατηγοὶ πλέονες A βελτίονες. 23. Svra—agreeing with the implied object οὗ ξυνέθεσαν.
πολλά is in limiting apposition depends on rà πολλά.
to this object,
and
τὰ
αὐτῶν
168
THUCYDIDES
I
24. äwlarres— ‘so as to be ificredible.' This pregnant use of an adverb ınay often be noticed in the phrases with ἔχειν, διακεῖσθαι, διατιθέναι.
ἐπὶ won
τὸ
μυθῶδες
ἐκνενικηκότα
— generali
rendered
their way into the region of the fabulous':
‘have
but Croiset
explains ‘in which the fabulous character has ended by prevailing.’ 26. ὧς παλαιὰ elvarc—for the restrictive infin. see M. 7. §781 ; ‘sufficiently considering their antiquity.’ The ‘ plainest indications’ are the τεκμήρια of § 1.
27. καὶ ὁ -ól«uos— Thuc. having ascertained, as clearly as is possible, the small importance of earlier undertakings, now returns to the Pel. War, which, to all who judge it in the light of the facts, will be found to have proved more important than they (τὰ παλαιά).
28. ἐν ᾧ-- while.’ Pace
19.
3. SnAsra—with partic., as in ii. 50 ἐδήλωσε. . ἄλλο τι ὄν. Cf. v. 9 δείξω οὐ παραινέσαι olds re ὧν. Cf. Jebb on Soph. Ant. 20. 5. καὶ ὅσα pév—after
his reference
to the importance
of
the war, Thuc. goes on to explain the manner in which he bas dealt with it.
ὅσα --" 88 regards all that.
teup is probably right in explaining this, not as merely pleonastic, but as a reference to the set speeches, as distinct from ‘words’ generally: hence=‘in debate.’ Note, however, the implied contrast between τὰ ἔργα τῶν λεχθέντων and τὰ ἔργα τῶν πραχθέντων, deeds of speech and of act.
6. ἐν atre—i.e. ἐν τῷ πολεμεῖν. 7. χαλεπόν --- for the
implied
sense
‘impossible’
Steup
compares c. 20, 1; vii. 87, 1.
9.
dy —rel. to τῶν λεχθέντων.
ἄλλοθέν Tof«v—' from the various places where they happened to be.'
10. ὡς 8° ἂν ἐδόκουν xv). —' I have represented the various speakers as uttering the sentiments that seemed to me appropriate to the
particular occasion,
while
I have kept as
closely as possible to the general sense of what was really said ' : lit. ‘as I believed that they would have best expressed what it
NOTES was necessary to say.'
169
ἄν and μάλιστα belong to εἰπεῖν : ἐχομένῳ
«Tr. to εἴρηται. to which ἐμοί is supplied. The order is thus awkward, but it is made easier by the preceding ἐμοί. (The sense does not allow us to connect ἐχομένῳ with ἐδόκουν.)
11. τὰ Béovra—i.e. the best arguments that could be found to support the ξύμπασα Hellenica p. 275, thinks
γνώμη of that Thuc.
the speaker. (Jebb, is tacitly contrasting
this method with that of Herod., and, as it can scarcely be doubted that he does so in the passage that follows, this is probably true.)
14. opposed
τὰ
δ᾽
to τὴν
ἔργα
τῶν
πραχθέντων — verbally
ἀκρίβειαν τῶν λεχθέντων
rather
this
than to
is ὅσα
λόγῳ εἶπον.
16. ἠξίωσα. --' thought it my business.’ οὐδ᾽ ὡς ἐμοὶ Lödne— ‘in accordance with my own whims.’ 17. οἷς τε αὐτὸς Tapfjv—i.e. (ἠξίωσα γράφειν ἐκεῖνα) ols: I described ‘facts which I myself witnessed and (I described facts) after inquiring about each detail from others,’ thus ἐπεξελθών is parallel to οἷς αὐτὸς παρῆν, which, as Mr. Forbes says, is equivalent to αὐτὸς παραγενόμενος. (Another way is to make ἐπεξελθών govern οἷς αὐτὸς παρῆν, but this has the eat disadvantage of making οἷς αὐτὸς παρῆν and παρὰ τῶν
ἄλλων parallel phrases. See crit. note.) 18. ὅσον δννατὸν äxpıßela—for (τοσοῦτον)
ὅσον
(accus.
δυνατὸν (ἦν) d. Notice that ἀκριβείᾳ here is subjective in sense, meaning the accuracy of Thuc., not the accuracy of the facts, as in § 1.
21. éxarépev— ‘towards either side,’ objective gen. to εὐνοίας, as in vii. 57, 10 ᾿Αθηναίων εὐνοίᾳ. (Croiset connects ἑκατέρων τις, ex utrisque partibus quisque.)
ὡς . . εὐνοίας ἢ μνήμης
Éxov—for the gen., that of the
sphere in which, depending on x wWs, ποῦ, ποῖ, and occasionally other advs. of manner, cf. c. 36, 2. ἔχοι is iterative.
23. Tb μὴ pußaßes— ‘the fact that he hears no legend in my history.' μή is here subjective, referring to what the reader will feel. (The edd., as frequently in Thuc., give various explanations of this μή.) αὐτῶν--- with τὸ un p. ; cf. c. 1, 2.
24. ärepwiorepov— ' less attractive.’ 25. τῶν y«opévoy —this means ‘the past’ so far as Thuc. records it, the period with which he deals; for Thuc. could
170
THUCYDIDES
I
not suppose that his work would be useful as a record of all pest history. Tb cadés—‘ the truth,’ ‘the exact nature.’ 26. τῶν μελλόντων κτλ. -- of what is likely to be repeated at some future time with more or less exactness.’ PAGE
20.
1, xplvav—subject τούτους. atra— ‘my history,’ as αὐτῶν above. 2. Te—concludiug, 'and so.'
áyévwrpa—the word means ‘performance,’ ‘feat,’ piece,’ or ‘prize’; here of a prize composition. is τὸ παραχρῆμα dxovew—‘ for immediate hearing.’ 4. τῶν
δὲ
wpóre«pov —it is by
this
time
shown
‘show
that
rà
παλαιά (cc. 2-17) were unimportant as compared with the Pel. War. But there remains the war against Xerxes (rà Μηδικόν,
see c. 18, 2, the μέγας
oröAos); and to that Thuc.
now passes. 5. δνοῖν νανμαχίαιν καὶ πεζομαχίαιν — which battles were these? The Schol. says Artemisium and Salamis ; Thermopylae and Plataea. But it is difficult to see how Mycale could be left out, and owing to the indecisive character
of Artemisium, it is likely that Thuc. did not mean to include it, and reckoned Mycale as ἃ ναυμαχία.
7. τούτου δὲ τοῦ w.—it is not possible to say with certainty whether Thuc. alludes the Pel. War.
to the Ten Years’ War, or the whole of
péya — predicative. 8. ξυνηνέχθη; cf. c. 9, 2. frequent in Herod. ll. ὑπὸ
βαρ
This use also, with an infin., is
v—if the Ten Years
War is meant, the
only case mentioned by Thuc. is Colophon (iii. 84); but if the Twenty-seven Years’ War be meant, Mycalessus (vii. 29)
may be included, though ἠρημώθησαν is somewhat exaggerated. ὑπὸ σφῶν abrév—as Thyrea (iv. 57).
12. οἰκήτορας 70), Anactorium (v. 116).
Plataea
peréBadov—as
(iii. 68), Mytilene
(iii. 50),
Aegina (ii. 27), Potidaea (ii.
(iv. 49), Scione (v. 33),
Delos (v. 1), Melos
NOTES 18. $vya(—sc.
ἐγένοντο.
171
Instances of exile as the direct
consequence of the war are the Plataeans (ii. 5), driven out by the Thebans ; the Lesbians, who fled before the Athenians (iv. 52); exile as the result of στάσις occurred at Corcyra (iii.
69), Megara (iv. 74). 15. τά τε πρότερον xTÀ. — ‘moreover what was formerly repeated on hearsay, but seldom confirmed by fact, now became credible,’ because men saw it all.
17. σεισμῶν τε πέρι. . ἡλίον re ἐκλείψειε---[ἢ 6 construction changes slightly. We might have had σεισμοί or περὶ ἐκλείψεων. 19. of αὐτοί --- moreover, the use of idem.
emphasising
ἰσχυρότατοι.
Cf.
20. πυκνότεραι-οὗ course Thuc. does not record all the strange things that befell μετὰ τοῦδε τοῦ πολέμου: e.g. he records
no instances
of αὐχμός
or λιμός
(for
does not refer to hunger caused by siege)
λιμοί
evidently
He records two
eclipses of the sun, one in 431 B.c. (ii. 28), the other in 424 B.C. (iv. 52), but if the Ten Years’ War be meant, three eclipses
could have been observed in Greece; or if the Twenty-seven Years’ War is alluded to, six. Of course it is not certain that all of the eclipses were actually observed ; Thuc., as Mr. Forbes
says, only gives the popular opinion. 2» παρὰ τά -' as Som pered with ' ; cf. iv. 6 χειμὼν μείζων παρὰ ν καθεστηκυῖαν y.
23. καὶ 4 . . ἡ vóros—the art. is similarly repeated to throw emphasis on the second part of the phrase—‘the disease that . . I mean the pestilence'—in c. 126, 4, and in several other instances. With νόσος most edd. supply ἐγένετο: but Steup rightly says οὐκ ἄπιστος κατέστη, for when Thuc. describes the plague in ii. 47, he expressly
says that 'it was said that
it had broken out in several other places previously’ to 430 B.c. μέρος
ti—object
number ' of the
of φθείρασα,
sc.
τῆς Ἑλλάδος,
‘a great
Greeks.
26. ἤρξαντο δέ-- the narrative of the war begins at the opening of Bk. ii, the remainder of this book being occupied with the αἰτίαι xal διαφοραί. The main emphasis is on M ID. κτλ. ; the date of the recovery of Euboea is 445 B.c. c. 115).
29. rds alrlas . . καὶ τὰς διαφοράς — these are again denoted by ἡ ἀληθεστάτη πρόφασις and al. . αἰτίαι in § 6.
172
THUCYDIDES PAcx
9. τὴν tive
I
21.
piv γὰρ x7TÀ.—apparently τὴν.
predicate
to τοὺς
᾿Αθηναίους.
. λόγῳ is attribu-
. ἀναγκάσαι,
88 Classen
explains, lit. ‘As for the truest motive . . I think that the A. . . forced' etc.
struction’
(Krüger)
The assumption
seems
of a *confusion
unnecessary.
Chambry
of con-
explains
τὴν d. πρόφασιν τοὺς ᾿Αθηναίους ἡγοῦμαι . . kal (ἡγοῦμαι) . . ἀναγκάσαι, so that ἡγοῦμαι has two objects differently expressed, but γιγνομένους and παρέχοντας can scarcely be separated. 4. v—of the actual motive, as in vi. 6, and now and then in other authors. When so used it seems to denote
the motive as it appears to the mind of the writer as distinct from the motive as put forward by the doer. δ.
ι
—in
Athenians during the
c. 118
period between
Thuc.
suys
that
the
the foundation of the
Delian Confederacy and the war (the Pentecontactia) ἐπὶ μέγα ἐχώρησαν δυνάμεως. We might, therefore, look for μείζους del in place of μεγάλους, but, as this is the first mention of Athenian power, the pos. is quite natural. This growing
greatness of A. is described in cc. 88-118;
ai . . X. αἰτίαι
occupy cc. 24-87.
11. 'E. ἐστι wédvg—‘ there is a city named E.’ lev Movr.—dat. of the ‘ person judging,’ frequent in Thuc. The direct accus. instead of és after ἐσπλεῖν is poetical, and occurs nowhere else in prose. 12. 'Ióvvovy—the Adriatic.
16. Koplvdios— when a city that was a colony founded & colony in turn, it was usual to choose & founder from the original mother-city. τῶν ἀφ 'H. depends on Φαλίος, 'of the family of the Heraclidae.' 21. Bóvapuis—see crit. note. The gloss πόλις is, of course, due to πολυάνθρωπος. An obvious change would be δύναμις u. καὶ CGróNs»
πολυάνθρωπος,
vossible
phrase,
but
δύναμις
as δύναμις
denotes
πολυάνθρωπος military
is surely
power:
cf. 88,
a 2
αὕτη (ἡ Sivas) πάρεστιν αὐτεπάγγελτος.
23. ἀπὸ πολέμον... ἐφθάρησαν -- in consequence of a war with . . they became crippled. 24. τῆς δυνάμεωξ depends on τῆς πολλῆς, i.e. the idiom ἡ πολλὴ τῆς δ. is used.
NOTES
173
25. τὰ δὲ re «vraia . . πολέμου --- ‘in the period immediately preceding this war.’ PAGE
22.
1. ἐπελθόντες — this conjecture seems required, since with
ἀπελθόντες (‘the departed exiles’) we miss a circumstantial partic. to eAnfovro. 7. περιορᾶν φθειρομένον: --ἰῃ c. 35, 4 περιορῶ with infin. With
infin. περιορῶ
occurs
only
in
Herod.
—éo: with partic. (pres. or aor. with meaning)= ‘look on’ with indifference. 15. ἐν
ἀπόρῳ
in Antiphon
v. 16,
lxovro — -ἔχεσθαι
ἐν
and
different
πολλῇ
Thuc.,
shade
ἀπορίᾳ
and
of
occurs
Lys. xiii. 11 ; εἶναι ἐν ἀπόρῳ Thuc. iii. 22.
The ordinary phrase is ἐν (πολλῇ) ἀπορίᾳ εἶναι.
16. θέσθαι τὸ Tapóv—' how to arrange the matter.’ 18. εἰ wapaSoteyv—oblique for the delib. subjunct. 19. τιμωρίαν
τινὰ
ποιεῖσθαι--ο.
c. δ,
1,
‘obtain
but the words would naturally mean ‘to bring help’
help’;
(the idiom
with ποιεῖσθαι). In vi. 60, however, ἄδειαν ποιεῖσθαι means ‘to obtain immunity.’ 20. atrots—' the Corinthians,’ depending on παραδοῦναι.
24. vier — here, and frequently in Herod. and Thuc., as direct reflexive, referring to the subject of the same clause. 27. κατά τε τὸ B(xavoy—this does not mean ‘as was right,’ but that τὸ δίκαιον was the motive put forward by the Corinthians; i.e. τὸ δίκαιον has its rhetorical use, and the
plea
may
be
illustrated
by
the
saying
συγγνώμη
ἀδελφῷ
βοηθεῖν. Pace
23.
2. ἅμα δὲ xa(—for the δέ following re cf. c. 11, 1. 4. οὔτε
yap— the
verb
is
ἔπεμπον
to the length of the sentence,
(c.
26,
1),
the construction
but,
owing
is changed
(anacoluthon), and instead of oi Κερκυραῖοι being the subject of the verb, & new subject, οἱ Κορίνθιοι, is introduced. e outline of the sentence ia as follows: 1. (a) οὔτε. . νομιζόμενα, (b) οὔτε. . ἀποικίαι : 2. περιφρονοῦντες δέ, (a) καὶ (‘hoth’) . . πλουσιωτάτοις, (b) kal . . δυνατώτεροι, (c) ναυτικῷ δὲ .. ἐπαιρόμενοι,
etc.
174
THUCYDIDES
I
4. ἐν πανηγύρεσι ταῖς xowais—festivals common to Corinth and Corcyra. 5. γέρα — the schol. rather vaguely says τὰς τιμὰς xai προεδρίας. The corresponding passage in Diodorus says that
the Corcyraeans neglected to send animals for sacrifice. 6. Κορινθίῳ ἀνδρὶ. . ἱερῶν — Herod. vi. 81 (Cleomenes of Sparta at Argos) Xen. Hell. iii. 4 (Agesilaus of Sparta at Aulis) allude to the fact that & ξένος could not offer sacrifice in a strange city without permission. Dittenberger shows that προκατάρχεσθαι is equivalent to προθύειν (cf. Syl. Ins. Gr. 323 and 358): certain ceremonies took place before ἃ victim was killed for sacrifice (Gardner and Jevons, p. 250), and these
ceremonies had to be performed by a citizen of the place.
The
Corcyraeans would not perform them for Corinthians, and thus
prevented the latter from sacrificing in Corcyra. προκατάρχεσθαι
Thuc. uses
here for the usual κατάρχεσθαι.
8. καὶ χρημάτων xTÀ. — ‘partly because the power that money gave them put them on a level with the richest of the Greeks.’ By ‘the richest of the Greeks’ the Corinthians themselves are meant.
There is some exaggeration, no doubt,
for the Athenians
actually
were
among
the
richest ; but
the
wealth of Corinth had become a tradition (see c. 18). ὁμοία ὄντες is not possible (see crit. note), and δυνατοί cannot be supplied with Herbst from δυνατώτεροι. δυνάμει. . ὁμοίᾳ or δυνάμει. . ὁμοῖοι would give the required sense with a proper construction, but no correction is certain.
12. προύχειν---ἐπαίρομαι ‘ boast.’ ἔστιν
is found only here with
ὅτε--- with καὶ κατὰ
κτλ.,
‘sometimes
even
infin.— on
the
ground that the Phaeacians, who were famous for seamanship, had dwelt in Corcyra before them.' The Greeks identified Corcyra with the Scheria of the Odyssey. For the naval reputation of the Phaeacians see Od. vii. 34-39, where they are called ναυσικλυτοί.
14. ἡ «xal—‘ this circumstance (that they were proud of the reputation of the Phaeacians) led them to.’ xal-‘and in act. 15. οὐκ ἀδύνατοι,
meiosis for δυνατώτατοι.
18. ἔπεμπον ---' sent,’ the imperf. being frequently used with πέμπω
and
other
verbs—xeAeów,
δέομαι
etc.— where
we
look
for aor. Perhaps it is because it takes time to deliver the message. 20. καὶ ’Aumpanıarav— with φρουρούς. 22. ᾿Απολλωνίαν---πονν the ruins of Pollina, S. of Durazzo.
NOTES Pace
176
24.
2. καὶ forepov—in contrast with εὐθύς. seems
edd.
to anticipate
explain with
ἀλλὰ
Poppo,
στρατεύουσιν
that this
The érepos στόλος
κτλ. in $ 4;
new
force
but
consisted
the
of
fifteen ships (hence forty below, cf. c. 29, 4). But στρατεύουσιν er’ αὐτούς should not allude to a hostile move made by the twenty-five ships already on the spot (the rendering ‘assume
the offensive' being inadmissible): they should refer only to
the new force sent from home.
9. κατ᾽ érfpaav—‘in a threatening manner,’ with éxéAevor. 6. ἀποδεικνύντε---οἵ. c. 25, 2, ‘calling their attention to graves (of their common
ancestors
buried
of blood, to which they appealed.’
at Corcyra) and ties
ἥν applies equally to both
nouns, but is attracted to the nearer.
9. atrév—neut., with οὐδέν, ‘the demands.’
10. ἀλλὰ crpaTreóoveiv —paratazis, the sense being, ‘but, instead of the E. listening to their demands, the C.' 14. προεῖπον combines public ‘summons’ with ‘notice’; Herod. ii. 115; vii. 149. Infins. of combined also with λέγω and γιγνώσκω. 18. αὐτοῖς---866 on c. 18, 8.
22. ἐπὶ "i. ἐκήρυσσον.
(different
kinds
are
. Vvav—epexegesis of ἀποικίαν, and governed by For the dat. fem. in adverbial phrase cf. c. 15, 2.
The new colonies were to have equal rights with the old. 24. ἐθέλει. . BosXerav—if ἐθέλοι is right, the two moods are combined in 0.0. ; ἐθέλοι represents ἐθέλει of recta, and there is no change of meaning. It should be noticed that the Laurentian ives ἐθέλει : for the change of indic. after ei to optat. is rare, ut occurs occasionally, as in Lys. vii. 34 προσῆλθον λέγων ὅτι . . ἕτοιμός εἰμι, εἴ τινα βούλοιτο (-Ξ βούλει), παραδοῦναι. Thuc. viii. 89, 3 εἰ μὴ ἥκοιεν represents εἰ μὴ ἥκουσι. 26. Kopww@lag—the the value of the Attic.
Cor.
drachma
In
was about two-thirds of
pévery-—oblique for μενέτω. PAGE 25. 4.
K
fvev —
Cephallenia, of which
9. nevds—sc. ἀνδρῶν.
partitive;
there
Pale was one.
were
four
πόλεις
in
176 15.
THUCYDIDES παρέλαβον — ‘had
the request.
taken
I
with
them,’
to
support
There is no difficulty in supposing that Sparta
and Sicyon were ready to lend their voice to a request that Corinth
should
withdraw
the new
settlers.
These
οἰκήτορες
must have appropriated the property of the exiled Corcyraean oligarchs ; and the proceeding of Corinth was in this respect high-handed. The sending of the πρέσβεις did not commit Sparta to anything. 18. ἀντιποιοῦνται---8.. ᾿Επιδάμνου.
δίκας Bobüyav.— ‘submit the case to arbitration.’ καὶ δέχεσθαι is a technical
States
as
opposed
to
ὃ, διδόναι
phrase for legal arbitration between
war:
cf.
vii.
18
ὅπλα
μὴ
ἐπιφέρειν
ἣν δίκας ἐθέλωσι διδόναι.
19. αἷς ἂν κτλ. -- παρ᾽ αἷς ἂν δίκας δοῦναι d. κα. 21. κρατεῖν---8α. ἤθελον.
ἤθελον δέ---Δὴ alternative suggestion to submit the decision to Apollo. 22. π y δὲ xrÀ.—'but they charged them not to cause a war.
Notice
the difference between πόλεμον ποιῶ and
κ. ποιοῦμαι.
23. εἰ δὲ μή---Ἱ 7. 8478. καὶ atrol—'they in turn.’ The elaborate wording of the allusion to Athens is intended to mark the earnestness and reluctance of the Corcyraeans.
24. ἐκείνων βιαζομένων --- if the Corinthians forced them.’ 25. ἑτέρους τῶν vüv—gen. of comparison ; Xen. Mem. Iv. iv. 25 ἄλλα τῶν δικαίων.
So Lat. alius occasionally has abl.
τῶν
νῦν ὄντων means the Peloponnesians whose confederacy Corcyra threatens to leave. μᾶλλον goes with φίλους ποιεῖσθαι, ‘sooner’ than agree to the demand of Corinth. 26. ὠφελίας ἕνεκα ---΄ in self-defence.’ PaGE
1.
πρότερον
δ᾽
26.
κτλ. — equivalent
to
οὐ
καλῶς
ἔχειν
πρότερον αὐτούς (the Corinthians and Corcyraeans) δικάζεσθαι, πολιορκουμένων τῶν ᾿Επιδαμνίων, but the logic of the sentence is sacrificed to a verbal antithesis. 4. tatra—i.e. withdraw the ships and the Illyrians.
ἑτοῖμοι δὲ elya.— Krüger supplies δικαξεσθαι, and ὥστε then —'on the understanding that ; but this is not very satisfactory after ποιήσειν ταῦτα has intervened. Böhme and others
NOTES
177
make μένειν depend on ἑτοῖμοι εἶναι, with ὥστε pleonastic ; and for this ἱκανὸς ὥστε is cited from Plat. Protag. 338 c. In either case the sense is the same; they were prepared to agree that besiegers and besieged should stay as they were and
make a truce until the arbitration was concluded. ποιήσασθαι is co-ordinate with μένειν. (Mr. Forbes supplies ποιεῖν ταῦτα to ἑτοῖμοι εἶναι : but ποιεῖν ταῦτα cannot-— δικάζεσθαι,
for in that
case the second proposal of the Corcyraeans, ἣν καὶ ἐκεῖνοι κτλ., i» a lessconciliatory suggestion
$2.) 9. προπέμψαντες.
than
their original proposal,
. Tpóre«pov—pleonasm, as in c. 23, 5.
11. ἑβδομήκοντα καὶ Tévre—the numbers given in c. 27, 2 amount to 68, but to these are to be added the νῆες κεναί from
Elis. ιλίοις —the number is puzzling, as in c. 27, 2 the Cor. are said to be preparing to send 3000. 12. &mt—‘ for, not
‘against.’
ἐναντία,
internal accus. as
adv.; cf. c. 6, 6.
19.
τὸ
ἱερὸν
'AmdAAwvos— ‘the
celebrated
temple’
of
᾿Απόλλων "Axrıos, best known to us from its connexion with the battle of Actium. 21.
wpovrepav— before taking hostile action.
23. teófavres—probably this means that they inserted new cross-beams, called {vywpara or $vyá, connecting one side of the ship with the other. (The ζνυγώματα, however, may be ribs, σταμῖνες.) This has nothing to do with undergirding, which,
as Mr. Forbes says, would be ζύσαντες.
24. érurxevacavres—‘overhauled’ needed.
to
see if repairs were
27. τεσσαράκοντα. —see c. 25, 4. PaGE
27.
2. παρὰ ToÀó—always with a word implying comparison ; of. παρὰ πολὺ ἡσσηθέντες 11. 89, 3. 6. Tapacrfcac9a.—sc. τὴν ᾿Επίδαμνον. ὥστε--ἐφ᾽ wre. . drhAvdas—the οἰκήτορες of c. 26, 1.
10. Acvxlppy—Leukimo, battle was doubtless fought.
SE. of Corcyra,
near which
the
178
THUCYDIDES
I
11. &\Aovs—those taken in the sea-fight. 18. τῆς yfjs—partitive. 20. τοῦ τε χρόνον τὸν πλεῖστον---Ὑ]ἢ μέχρι οὗ, ‘most of the time ’ they were controlling the sea and plundering the allies, ‘until.’ (Classen and Herbst understand by ὁ χρόνος the
remainder
of the campaigning
season,
but, without any
ualification of χρόνος, this is surely impossible.)
Of course the
time intended must depend on the meaning of περιόντι τῷ θέρει͵ for which see next note. Thuc. means that the Corcyraeans did
not keep
their fleet at sea all the time between the
departure of
the Corinthian fleet and its reappearance.
περιιόντι TQ θέρει--- περιόντι, being the reading of all Mss., may be acce ted. If περιεῖναι is intended, the explanation offered (Ullrich and others) ia in *the remaining part of the summer.' Herbst supports this rendering with ἐν τῷ αὐτῷ θέρει τελευτῶντι etc.
(see the passages quoted
by Mr.
Forbes).
But rq θέρει
reAevrürr. means
‘in the summer when it was ending’; and
περιόντι τῷ Oépec
in the summer when it was (all) remaining
over,’ the predicative partic., as Krüger says, modifying the whole sphere covered by the sense of the noun (cf. Bloomfield’s note): this cannot yield the sense ‘in the remaining part of the summer.' περιόντι must therefore be referred to περμέναι, Aeolic elision. Examples of this elision of the: of περί are Aesch. Ag. 1145 περέβαλον, Eum. 634 περεσκήνωσεν, and περιών is frequently iven in M88. for vepuwv. In Xen. Hell. 111. ii. 25 the best Ms.
as περιόντι τῷ ériavrQ. This means ‘during the summer when it was coming round’ to autumn, drawing to a close. Steup
and others, following the Schol. ἐνισταμένῳ, understand ‘when the summer came round’ to mean, when the next summer came ;
but this does not square so well with the concluding
the chapter, which
seem
to refer to the winter
which the battle was fought.
words of
of the year in
If 'drawing to a close' is the
meaning, then the dates would be: Battle of Leucimme (c. 29, 4),
.
.
Spring 435.
Return of Corinthian fleet (c. 30, 3), Autumn 435.
Corinthian preparations (c. 31, 1) . If, however,
the sense is
Summer 435-33.
‘when the next summer
came,’ the
first two dates should be altered to summer 435, and spring 484. (Remember that 'summer' in Thuc. includes spring and autumn.)
In either case the calculations are based on the
date of the battle of Sybota, for which see c. 51. 25. ed$év—seo c. 2b, 2.
NOTES PAGE
179
28.
5. τὸ θέρος robro—i.e. for what was left of the campaigning season of 435. (If περιόντι applies to the next summer, then the whole summer of 434 would be meant.)
9. ὀργῇ ofpowres—‘ excited by' the war, ὀργή being ‘ passion, excitement, impulse,’ as well as anger. It is the ‘war fever' that Thuc. means.
11. τὰ κράτιστα---οἷ. c. 19, end. 12. &
τε
αὐτῆς
κτλ.- -ἐρέτας
which μισθῷ πείθοντες is subordinate.
is object
of dyelpovres,
to
Steup, however, supplies
γαῦς to ἀγείροντες, and makes μ. πείθοντες co-ordinate with dyelporres. He joins τῆς ἄλλης 'E. ἐρέτας together (‘rowers
belonging to other parts of Greece’). With the ordinary construction, supply ἐκ before τῆς. 16. ἔνσπονδοι-- ξύμμαχοι. ἐσεγράψαντο---οαιϑαϊ mid. 19. γενέσθα----ἀοροπαθηΐ on πειρᾶσθαι. Under the terms of the treaty the ἄγραφοι πόλεις might seek the alliance of either Athens or Sparta ; but of course the request might be refused. 20. ἀφελίαν = βοήθειαν. 22. wpeoßevedpevor— ‘to negotiate with them.’ The mid.
seems used.
to express reciprocity,
and
24. wpoo-yevépevov—trans.
‘the
the word
is rather loosely
addition
of their fleet to
. , the chief emphasis being on the partic. 25. θέσθαι---8δ in o. 25, 1.
26. ἐς ἀντιλογίαν ἦλθον---οἴ. els λόγους ἐλθεῖν τινι. 28. εὐεργεσίας. . ὀπρονφειλομένης— ‘without having a claim through some great service rendered or through 8 previously existing alliance. The meaning is simply ‘we cannot urge that we are seeking to renew an old ξυμμαχία or
that we have a claim on you for services rendered.' . * We are not εὐεργέται of Athens': for this see on c. 137, εὐεργεσία ὀφείλεται and c. 128, 4. PAGE
29.
2. τοὺς πέλας —'others.'
4. mp@rov—answered by ἔπειτα δέ. δ. Eiubopa— internal accus. — ξύμφορον δέησιν.
4 καί μοι
180
THUCYDIDES
I
7. BtBawov—(cf. c. 2) pred., ‘ unfailing.’ εἰ. . naracrhroveı— ‘if they do not propose to... 9. perá— ‘while’ or ‘besides,’ a characteristic substitute for μετὰ
τοῦ rh» ξυμμαχίαν
αἰτεῖν.
12. τετύχηκε δὲ «rA.—lit. ‘it has turned out that the same conduct not only involves us in inconsistency in our dealing with you, as regards the request we make, but is also disadvantageous (to us) in respect of our own position at the present time'; i.e. because we have hitherto abstained from entering your alliance it is inconsistent to be seeking
it now,
and for the same reason we are now in danger. To ἄλογον and ἀξύμφορον supply 5», which is often omitted with τυγχάνω, φαίνομαι, 34 end.
διατελῶ,
and
occasionally with
16. ἑκούσιοι— ‘having
other verbs; cf. c.
deliberately avoided
(not ‘having entered into no alliance,
all alliances’
if we could help it’).
The strained position of ἑκούσιοι, and other words, throws special emphasis on the different parts of the clause. This statement is referred to by the Corinthian at c. 37, 2 ξιμμαχίαν οὐδενός πω
δέξασθαι.
18. Kopw0(ev—with πόλεμον ; cf. θεῶν πόλεμος, θεῶν ὄρκος,
‘oath by the gods.’ δι
atré—‘on
that account,’
a favourite
use
of αὐτό
and
αὐτά with Thuc.
19. περιέστηκεν. . φαινομένη--' what formerly seemed discretion in us . . has now on the contrary proved clearly to be want of foresight and weakness.’ The as in the construction τυγχάνει οὖσα.
20. τῇ
.
.
Yoopy—with
£vy.,
partic. with περιεστάναι But cf. c. 120, 5.
‘to
share
the
risks of
another's policy.'
22. τὴν. . vaypaxlav—internal accus. 28. κατὰ pédvas—perhaps δυνάμεις is the subst. omitted in this phrase= ‘ unaided.’ 28. peyas—sc.
ἔσται ἡμῖν. Pace
30.
1. μὴ μετὰ κακίας kxTÀ. —'not maliciously, but because we were mistaken in our policy, we boldly act in a manner inconsistent with our former inactivity.'
ere is nothing mean in
seeking an alliance now for the first time when we are in danger: we were mistaken in not seeking it before.
NOTES 4. ἡ tvvruxta
181
. . τῆς ἡ. xpelas—lit. ‘the coincidence of
our request,’ i.e. ‘our request, coming at such a moment.’
10. ὡς ἂν μάλιστα. . papruplov—sc. καταθεῖσθε, lit. ‘as you would most with a record never forgotten,' i.e. 'in the manner most certain to be remembered for ever by us.'
1l. kara8fqrecÓ«—necessary correction of καταθῆσθε, confer the favour on us.' money. Cf. c. 128, 4.
The
met.
is from
* will
investment
12. γαντικόν τε still depends on ὅτι. 15. καὶ (πρὸ πολλῆς) Xäpıros—i.e. your gratitude
of
would
have been great even if you could only have gained this accession of power for a large sum. Isocr. 18, 11; Dem. pro. 88.
16. Sivapıy— ‘a power’ (powerful state), to be translated as subject of πάρεστιν.
18. φέρουσα is—'producing in the minds of others an impression of generosity, a feeling of gratitude in those whom...’
Notice the use of ἀρετή here.
23.
ἀσφάλειαν
ἀρετὴν
καὶ χάριν.
—referring
to
Pace
ἰσχύν:
κόσμον
referring to
31.
1. ójerépe —' of you.’
2. δνναμένους
—Stahl
to Κορινθίους, and
καταλαμβάνοντας
takes
removes
depends
on
this and
the
second
αἰσθάνεται.
ὄντας in apposition καί so that only xpo-
It is better with
Steup to render the first καί ‘both,’ and to make ὄντας also
depend on αἰσθάνεται : *and are preparing by trying to subdue us for an attack on you.’ 5. κατ᾽ αὐτοὺς. . στῶμεν---΄ confront them.’ δνοῖν φθάσαι ἁμάρτωσιν —(1) ‘may not lose two things’ means ‘may secure one or the other’: hence 4. ing. (2) But the construction of φθάσαι and δυοῖν Taking δυοῖν dependent on ἁμάρτωσιν, as in Andoc. τοῖν μεγίστοιν κακοῖν οὐκ ἣν αὐτῷ ἁμαρτεῖν, most
φθάσαι epexegetic, ‘to
The order is
one of them.’
. % followis doubtful. i. 20 övow edd. make
gain them before (we make alliance).’
against this, and
φθάσαι should then =‘to gain
It has been proposed to remove φθάσαι ; but it
is best, with Croiset, to take δυοῖν as dat. — fail to be before-
hand with two things.’
Either they will inflict a disastrous
defeat on Corcvra, or frighten her into joining themselves.
8. διδόντων— ‘offering,’ as frequently.
182
THUCYDIDES
I
9. προεπιβουλεύειν. . ἀντεπιβουλεύειν — the jingle called paronomasia, to which Thuc. is partial; e.g. vi. 76 οὐκ ἀξυνετωτέρον xaxotuverwrépou δέ.
16. ἐκπέμπονται---50. οἱ ἄποικοι, from πᾶσα ἀποικία. 17. προκληθέντε!---860 c. 28, 2. 19. τῷ ἴσῳ---τῷ νόμῳ καὶ τῷ δικαίῳ, wap οἷς ἡ ἰσότης (Schol.). τὰ ἐγκλήματα μετελθεῖν —like δίκην μέτειμι, ‘enforce their claims.' 21.
éer«—Ífor the construction cf. c. 49, 7 ; 129, 3.
22. ἐκ τοῦ εὐθέοε---' in a straightforward way,’ with δεομένοις. 25. MapBávev—the same use with subst. referring to the feelings, c. ΤΊ, 6 ; cf. ii. θ4 τὸ ἐπίφθονον λαμβάνειν.
27. pydSerépev—on account of the subjective sense given by δεχόμενοι---ἰῦ is from the Lac. point of view. 28. elonraı— ‘there is a clause’ in the thirty years’ truce. PacE
32.
1. ἀρέσκηται --56. ἐλθεῖν, mid., not as in c. 129 rois λόγοις ἀρέσκομαι. The yse of the mid. is Ionic. 5. προκειμένης--‘open to all.’ 7. dra— ‘and actually’ as a climax of arrogance an object if you help us. 9. ἐν αἰτίᾳ ἔχειν ---δ frequent idiom in Thuc. (Kr., followed by Steup, reads ὠφελίας.
εἴ re ἐν.
. δεόμεθα, πολὺ δὴ
κτλ.)
11. οὐχ ὅπως---΄ so far from.’ 14. περιόψεσθε---ἰἶπ] sense—édcere, hence the infin. With the partic. περιορᾶν — to overlook what actually occurs; p. 22 Av—sc. δύναμιν προσλαβεῖν αὐτοὺς περιιδεῖν. ἀλλ΄ — sc. δίκαιόν ἐστι.
15. κἀκείνων.
. καὶ fjuty—i.e. stop them too from getting
help, if you will not help us, or help us too if you let them
‘help themselves’
from your
empire.
κωλύω
with a pers.
object and without infin., *stop the mercenaries they draw,' is not common; Eur. frag. 1011 Nauck οἰκοφθόρον γὰρ ἄνδρα κωλύει γυνὴ ἐσθλή.
16. πέμπειν odedlav—means
‘send aid’ without concluding
NOTES a formal
alliance:
βοηθεῖν
ἀπὸ
183 τοῦ
receive us into alliance and so help us.’ 19. ὑπείπομεν— ‘suggested.’ The
π.
δεξαμένου: =‘ openly
ref.
is
to c. 83,
1
γενήσεται καλὴ ἡ £vrrvx(a κατὰ πολλά.
20. μέγιστον ---86. τὸ ξυμφέρον
ἀποδείκνυμεν.
We
have the
same powerful enemies as you have; and that is a great advantage to you, because it will bind us to you. 21. forav— ‘are, as we saw’; the didactic imperf. : but the word is prob. spurious, because (1) this use of the imperf. is not made out for the speeches of Thuc.: (2) we cannot supply ἦσαν to what follows—obro«
. . BAáyai—but require εἰσίν, since
nothing has been said to suggest that. 23. τοὺς peraorävras— ‘those who shall have abandoned
your alliance.’ This seems more probable than the rendering ‘those who have abandoned them (Corinth), as the mother-
city. Athens may feel that Corcyra would be afraid to abandon the alliance with her. 24. οὐχ ὁμοία ἡ orp(ecw—Classen GÀ and others understand ‘the rejection of it is not the same thing (as if it were a continental alliance),' ie. is more dangerous to you. Stahl, Steup and others: ‘to estrange us is not a matter of indifference to you,’ which accounts better for the ἀλλά following: ‘but you should make friends with a naval power if you cannot prevent its existence.’
26. dav . . Exaw—infin. in imperative sense.
(Some think
δεῖ is lost before εἰ δὲ μή.) Pace
33,
2. φοβεῖται 54—supply ὅστις as subject, but it is usual to omit the second rel. in Greek in such a case.
3. τὰς σπονδὰς λύσῃ --ἰ.6.ὄ if he has not been convinced by what we have said on this
point; see c. 85, 1.
Legally, the
speaker has already explained, there will be no breach of the truce;
but
the alliance
might
be considered
by
Corinth
as ἃ
breach of its spirit.
4. τὸ δεδιός — a favourite construction of Thuc.: ii. 59, 3 τὸ ὀργιζόμενον
τῆς γνώμης : below
c. 84,
6; τὸ μέλλον
90,2;
142, 8. The neut. partic. with art. as noun is rarely used by other prose authors: Xen. Cyr. tv. v. 89 rà ἐλλεῖπον. ἰσχὺν Ixov—as the result of alliance with us.
5. μὴ δεξαμένου ---΄ if he rejects our request.’
184
THUCYDIDES
7. ἀδείστερον — ‘less formidable’:
I here
in passive sense.
Cf. the double meaning of φοβερός, formidolosus. of . . τὸ πλέον — ἧσσον.
10. ἐς Tbv.
. ἐνδοιάζῃ κτλ. —' hesitates to secure for her in
view of the war... a place which becomes friend or enemy with most important consequences to you’ (in either case).
13. rhs . . Σικελίας depeuds on παράπλου,
‘ the coasting
voyage to I. and S.,' Corcyra being the half-way house when the ordinary route to Sicily and Lower (Greek) Italy was taken
— viz. round the coast of Peloponnese and to Corcyra and thence across. The gen. παράπλου depends on καλῶς in the phrase καλῶς κεῖται constructed on the analogy of καλῶς ἔχει,
ὡς ἔχει (e.g. c. 22, 3) etc.
16. &wa\ßeiv—generally go to attack, here to help.
Sparta
hoped for such help from the west.
τό τε ἐνθένδε---δ fleet going from Athens to Italy or Sicily. This passage was prob. written by "'huc. later in the war, when Athens had sent out such fleets via Corcyra.
18. Bpaxvráre κτλ. — ‘this is the briefest summary, including the whole situation and the details, by which . .' τοῖς τε ξύμπασι καὶ καθ᾽ ἕκαστον is taken by Classen as adverbial
— * on the whole as well as in detail,’ but there is no parallel
for the phrase in dative.
It is awkward,
but better,
to make
it apposition to κεφαλαίῳ (Krüger). It is true that only one general matter is presently referred to (viz. the naval strength of Corcyra), so that rà καθ᾽ ἕκαστον seem wanting (Stahl) ; but the speaker means ‘if you think out this summary, you will
find it includes all detailed arguments too.’ the ξυμφέροντα
to Athens
that are brought
If we look at
forward in this
speech, we shall notice (1) that the speaker in each case leads up to the fleet of Corcyra as the crowning argument, (2) that he is well aware
that this is the argument
that will reall
impress Athens. [{ is therefore right to insist on it at the end. κεφάλαιον means ‘summary’ of the points previously raised. Edd. seem to overlook the fact that this ‚passege is rhetorical, and not necessarily strictly accurate. (The remedy proposed is to make τοῖς. . ἕκαστον masc., either as dat. commodi
depending on B. κεφαλαίῳ (Poppo, Steup) or placed after or before ξυμφορώτατόν ἐστι.)
20. τρία pév—sc. ἐστί : ὄντα belongs to λόγον ἄξια.
(There is
no anacoluthon here.)
26. πλείοσι κτλ.--- with our ships in addition (to yours). For this use of πλείων cf. e.g. Aesch. 44g. 755 τὸ δυσσεβὲς "yàp
NOTES ἔργον . . πλείονα
τίκτε.
(To
take
185 rais
ἡμετέραις
as dat.
measure dependent on πλείοσι gives an ugly construction.) PacE
of
34.
3. ὡς καί for καὶ ws, unless καί is due to dittography (ws and καί are sometimes confused in Mss.). The parallels quoted, like ii. 44 ὅ τι ἄξιον καὶ εἰπεῖν, are not close. (Steup thinks that after καί a clause is lost in which one of the two topics summed up in ἀμφοτέρων was expressed.)
5. apdoripav—strictly τὸ ἡμᾶς ἀδικεῖν and τὸ αὐτοὺς πολεμοῦσθαι are but one topic differently expressed, and the two aspects of the matter are not clearly distinguished in what follows. 6.
obra —like (um demum.
7. dflwow—‘ claim.’
8. μὴ dAXoylo-ras—together as oue word. 10. τὸ &£—' but that,’ τό being demonstrative in sense. 11. dperg—either depending on ἐπί, or perhaps rather causal dat.
ἀρετή means τὸ σῶφρον : cf. c. 82, 4.
ξύμμαχόν re—we have here the only example of re followed by οὔτε (before παρακαλοῦντες. οὔτε . . Te 18 common): ‘ wishing to have no ally in their nefarious schemes (persecuting their neighbours) or witness (οὐδέ does not mean ‘not even’
here as Mr. Forbes supposes), and to avoid exposing themselves to shame by asking others to aid them (in such schemes). The
simplest change proposed is to alter οὐδέ to οὔτε (Weil), so that τε would co-ordinate βουλόμενοι to ἐπὶ κακουργίᾳ kal οὐκ ἀρετῇ
and οὔτε u. ἔχειν ΞΞ' neither to have any ally as a witness in their schetnes nor to.
.'
15. αὐτάρκη θέσιν — internal accus.: the meaning is presently explained in διὰ τὸ κτλ. 16. παρέχει αὐτοὺς kTÀ. —‘ makes them judges of the wrongs they inflict more than (they would be) if they were hampered by treaties.” cf. c. 76, 3:
With μᾶλλον 4 κατά, ‘more than accords with,’ il. 50 χαλεπωτέρως
N κατὰ
τὴν
ἀνθρωπείαν
φύσιν.
(γίγνεσθαι does not belong to the phrase, but to δικαστάς only.)
δικαστάς-the meaning is that a citizen of another state who went to law with a Corcyrean must proceed as a ξένος in the Corcyrean courts: Corcyra does not experience a similar difficulty, whether real or assumed, because her citizens do not need to have dealings with other states to anything like the
186
THUCYDIDES
I
same extent. Corcyra was, of course, the port of call for all vessels passing to and from the west by the ‘coasting’ route; but the grievance based on this fact is surely exaggerated here. 18. ἐκπλέοντας agrees with ‘the Corcyreans ': others when at sea ἀνάγκῃ καταίρουσι to Corcyra.
20. καὶ τοῦτο κτλ. --- the speaker now alludes to disputes between Corcyra and another state (meaning Corinth) er τούτῳ, ‘this being their conduct’ (see crit. note), is not right, because the argument shifts here to a new point. τὸ εὐπρεπὲς Anwovboy—cf. e.g. vi. 84 τὸ ξυνηθὲς ἤσνχον.
21. προβέβληνται--as a
shield
or cloak
to
cover
their
ἀδικῶσι, and
means
ἀδικία. 22.
καὶ Swws--this
explains
κατὰ μόνας
whether they make unrighteous gains by force or by deceit— these two ways are summed feel no shame, 25.
up in 9%» . . *pocAáBwew-——they
because there is no witness.
«a(rov.—the
sentence
that
follows
refers
to both
the
grievances just alleged.
26. ἀληπτότεροι other verbs. M.T.§ 415.
ἦσαν
—the imperf. by assimilation to the
ἐξῆν is, of course, potential according to Goodwin, ἀληπτότεροι because of their αὐτάρκης θέσις. PAGE
1.
διδοῦσι
καὶ
δίκας in this ease
δεχομένοις (c. 28,
2);
35.
τὰ
5.— Corcyra
but the
Corinthian
had
offered
means
that
they would not enter into an alliance, a condition of which was regularly the settlement of disputes by arbitration.
4. διὰ wavrés—temporal. 8. τὰ εἰκότα θαυμάζεσθαι.---“ἴο
receive
the
proper
marks
of honour,' for which see c. 25, 4.
12. äptaxovres—Soph. O. T. 274 ὅσοις τάδ᾽ ἔστ᾽ ἀρέσκοντ᾽. 13. ἐπιστρατεύομεν — nor is it our way to attack a colony exceptionally unless we have suffered . .' The partic.
must
be conditional;
ἐπεστρατεύομεν,
sc.
but
ἄν,
the sense
‘nor
should
is much
we
be
improved
attacking
(Corcyra) in à manner so exceptional ' (as we are doing). μὴ á. would=el μὴ ἠδικούμεθα.
Thus
If ἐπιστρατεύομεν be right, ἐκ-
Tperós may = ‘unreasonably,’ being explained by μὴ.
μενοι : but ‘exceptionally’ has much more point here.
14. καλὸν δ᾽ fiy —cf. c. 37, 5.
by
them
. ἀδικού-
NOTES
187
16. alexpóv—slight anacoluthon, adding to the vigour of the sentence. 17. μετριότητα ---80. εἰ μέτριοι ἦσαν. ὕβρει δὲ xrÀ.—solemnity of 'gnomic' style; cf. L. ἃ S. under xópos.
19. xaxoupévnv—tem poral, 20. 4pocemovoüvro—as in c. 8. 3.
For the treatment of
Epidamnus by Corcyra see c. 24, and for the intervention Corinth c. 26.
of
21. ἔχονσι--now hold it.’ 23. fv ye κτλ. -αἀλλὰ ταύτην ye οὐκ ἐκεῖνον ὃς προύχων καὶ ἐκ τοῦ ἀσφαλοῦς προκαλεῖται, so that προύχοντα, ‘from ἃ position of superiority' (gained by the use of force), is coordinate with ἐκ τοῦ ἀσφαλοῦς.
25. λέγειν rı— ‘talk seriously.’ 26. ds ἴσον... καθιστάντα--[18 clause is in contrast with
προύχοντα
καὶ ἐκ τοῦ ἀσφαλοῦς, and must mean
that in order
that a demand for arbitration may be entertained, the party making the demand must first set himself on a level with the other party not merely in free discussion with him, but (what is more important), by giving up any advantage he has gained till a decision is arrived at. Transl. ‘but he who, before having recourse to arms, puts himself in deeds as well as in
words on a level.’
solution,’ whether
πρὶν διαγωνίζεσθαι may mean ‘before any
by arms or arbitration ; but πρὶν πολιορκεῖν
favours the more confined sense. The meaning of és ἴσον... καθιστάντα cannot be, according to the old explan., ‘ whose
deeds square with his words.’
28. πρὶν πολιορκεῖν .---πρίν ‘before’;
for the infin. after a
neg. preceding πρίν cf. c. 68, 2.
Paar 36. 5. ξυμμαχεῖν.
. £vvaBukety —c. 33, 4.
διαφόρους ὄντας agrees with σφᾶς. 7. wporutvar— ‘to have applied to you.’ 8. ἐν $—' under present circumstances, when.’ 11. ἀπογενόμενοι — οὐ μεταλαβόντες. 13. κοινώσαντες-- having given you a share
in.’
The
confusion of xowoü» and κοινωνεῖν (have a share in) in Mss. is very common. τὰ ἀποβαίνοντα means ὠφελία, the natural result τοῦ πάλαι κοινῶσαι
τὴν δύναμιν.
(ἐγκλημάτων
in C is an
188
THUCYDIDES
I
oversight—see the next line. The text of G gives a Scholium on tliis false reading from πάλαι to ἐγκλημάτων.) 21. ἀγράφων — τῶν μήπω ἐγγεγραμμένων. οὐ τοῖς kTÀ.—'that clause does not apply to those whose application is intended to cause injury to others.’ 22. GAN (ἐκείνῳ) Sarıs— ‘who does not withdraw from another’; cf. c. 38, 1. For tlie construction of ἀποστερῶν
Croiset quotes
Antiphon
v. 78 οὐκ ἀποστερῶν
γε.
. ἑαυτὸν
οὐδενός (ueut.).
24. peace applies whom
τοῖς for to they
δεξαμένοις xTÀ.—' will not cause war instead of those who have admitted them': εἰ σωφρονοῦσι the whole sentence, and means ‘as they—those to make the application—know if they are prudent.'
The brachylogy is the same as in vi. 11, 7 οὐ περὶ τῶν ἐν Σικελίᾳ . . ὁ ἀγών, el σωφρονοῦμεν, and also in iii. 44, 1. (This is
Steup's view, the best explanation that has been
given of this
awkward sentence. Classen, Stahl, Krüger and others assume that the ref. is to the conduct of the parties after the alliance is
concluded, and understand * who will
assure peace, not war to
those who receive them, if they, oi δέξάμενοι, show ordinary discretion.’ Croiset seems to refer el σωφρονοῦσιν to those making the application, but the two parallel passages tell against this. Weil proposes xel σωφρονοῦσιν.) 25. ποιήσει---΄ will cause.’ 8—i.e. τὸ πόλεμον ἔχειν κτλ. Pace
37.
8. ἐνσ πόνδων — i.e. you would be wiped out of the thirty years' truce, so far as we are concerned. ἀνάγκη yáp—the threat, we shall include you with them in our hostile measures, is vaguely expressed. τούτους is obj. to ἀμύνεσθαι, and μὴ ἄνευ ὑμῶν — μεθ᾽ ὑμῶν.
δ. xalroı—here means ‘and surely,’ not ‘and yet.’ δίκαιοί γ᾽ —the personal construction common with δίκαιος. 6. ἐκποδὼν arfivar—neutrality is your best plan. 9. Ei ἀνοκωχῆς . . ἐγένεσθε — cf. c. 78, 2 de’ ὄχλου εἶναι. ἀνοκωχή
is an armistice.
10. ὥστε. . δέχεσθαι explains τὸν νόμον. 11. Σαμίων ἀποστάντων —in 440 B.c., c. 115. semblance
between
the
two
cases is more
verbal
The than
re. real.
NOTES
189
The Corinthian keeps using ἀποστῆναι of Corcyra ; but Corcyra's ἀπόστασις WAS really only the estrangement of a colony from the mother-city, whereas Samos really revolted from the Athenian alliance.
18. δίχα ἐψηφισμένων --- were divided in their votes.’ 14. dvre(rropev—‘ made a counter proposal.’ 15. abrév—ipsum.
16. «
yàp
τοὺς
rwä=rdvra
κακόν
τινά.
κτλ. —an
argument
from
ex-
pediency to support the exhortation τὸν νόμον μὴ καθιστάναι . . δέχεσθαι. But the γάρ is strange, and should perhaps be
altered to δέ or re.
(Steup proposes to place this sentence at
the end of c. 42, where τῷ αὐτίκα φανερῷ
fits in with
φανεῖται
καὶ d.)
17. τιμωρήσετε---ΒΌΡΡΙΥ a dat.; the case of the common object follows the partic. according to the usual const. ; cf. c. Db, 1.
νεῖται
due to
καὶ
Thuc.
&—
himself.
perhaps
‘a
Potidaea,
prophecy
after
Lesbos
and
the
otlıer
event’
parts
revolted not so long after. & (in place of οἵ) adds to the bitterness of the sentence; and the unexpected word φανεῖται
is sarcastic, φαίνομαι being constantly coming πω, ὦ Corinth 23.
used in this way of the
of deliverers, helpers, etc. (0 λωφήσων γὰρ οὐ πέφηνέ χρόνῳ φανείς and so on). From the point of view of the revolt would be a ‘coming’ of this kind. fjv —antecedent χάριτος. We are not your enemies,
so you cannot refuse on that ground ; we are not that you cannot object that services on
your friends, so
both sides are natural,
and that we should not reckon what we did for you as laying you under an obligation. The ém- denotes reciprocity: ‘to be on terms of intimacy.'
"This antithesis is somewhat artificial,
and,
correspondence,
but
for
the
verbal
we
should
look
for
something like ὥστ᾽ εἰκὸς εἶναι προῖκα ἐπιχρῆσθαι ἡμᾶς (you and we) ἀλλήλοις. (The transl. ‘so as to use you freely ’ would be easier ; but there is no authority for ἐπιχρῆσθαι in this sense.)
27. wore—in the first war with Aegina, 505—491 B.c. ; hence ὑπὲρ τὰ
Μηδικά-πρὸ τῶν
Μηδικῶν,
see c. 14, 2.
PAGE 38, 2. ἐπικράτησιν
—the partiality of Thuc. for nouns in -σις
formed from verbs is well known
; some of tliem, like this and
πρέσβευσις (c. 73), occur nowhere
else iu classical authors.
A
190
THUCYDIDES
I
good example of the
preference for nouns over verbs occurs at
c. 187, 4 γράψας.
διάλυσιν : ἐνθύμησις, p. 117, 1. 5.
.
4. οἷς for ἐν οἷς after ἐν καιροῖς, hy a common idiom. 9. τὰ olxeta—‘ their own interests.’
ll. γεώτερός
τις — in ref. to the
Aeginetan
War.
The
sing. has attracted the verbs into the sing. in spite of ἐνθυμηθέντες. αὐτά might of course have been omitted, but Thuc. is
fond of putting it into the second member of a rel. sentence. (To repeat the rel. is exceptional.)
13. τοῖς ὁμοίοις ἀμύνεσθαι. --΄ ἴο requite us with like treat-
ment. ἀμύνομαι in this sense generally implies the paying back of injuries, and here we should expect ἀμείβεσθαι (see crit.
note, and cf. L. ἃ S. under ἀμείβομαι). Presently we have an ordinary phrase, τὸ ἴσον ἀνταποδοῦναι: but it may be that, in opposing the Corinthian ‘‘ δίκαιον " to the Corcyrean ‘‘ ξυμφέρον,"
ıuc. purposely makes the speaker use a word
that is properly
used of dealings between enemies: the speaker means ‘‘ They say we are your enemies (see c. 33, 3): you must judge of that by our actions in the past, and pay us for our so-called enmity with the same sort of
*enmity.' "
15. εἰ wodtqufioa—‘in the event of war.
The Corinthian,
like the Corcyrean, insisted on (1) τὸ δίκαιον, (2) τὸ ξυμφέρον, but—as Fr. Müller says—he deals vaguely with the latter
topic, since Corinth Corcyra had.
16. ἐν ᾧ--ο.
had
37, 4.
clearly less to offer Athens
ἕπεται-- 'is found,’
is a moral sentiment—much
but not much
in point here.
than
‘is there.’
It
like ‘ virtue is its own reward '—
Grammatically
being attracted into the relative clause.
ris is for rem,
17. τὸ μέλλον τοῦ πολέμου---1.6. it is not certain that war is coming. 20. ἐπαρθέντας abrp—' prompted by that expectation’ ; Eur. Orest. 286 ὅστις u’ ἑπάρας ἔργον
ἀνοσιώτατον (‘toa..
ἢ
κτλ.
22. ὑπαρχούσης πρότερον ---' that existed alreadv.'
This is
the Engl. equivalent, though ὑπαρχούσης is really émperf. partic.,
past in reference to ὑφείλομεν.
ὑφελεῖν μᾶλλον
‘is to diminish
rather than to add to,’ and the gen. is partitive (μᾶλλον does not belong to σῶφρον as Classen took it). For πρότερον ὑπῆρχε cf. vii. 28 πόλεμον οὐδὲν ἐλάσσω προσανείλοντο τοῦ πρότερον ὑπάρχοντος. The transl ‘that has existed for some time’ is
simple, but scarcely justified.
NOTES
191
Sa M — what event is alluded to! Edd. are much divided between (1) 'the Megarian decree, by which Athens excluded Megara from all her ports and markets (c. 67); (2) the revolt of Megara to Athens after & dispute with Corinth (c. 108 for τὸ σφοδρὸν μῖσος that Corinth conceived for Athens on this account) in 465 B.c.; (3) the revolt of Megara with Corinthian support, from Athens in 445 8.0. (cc. 114-115). The ὑποψία is that felt by Corinth, so that (3) appears unlikely—note ἔγκλημα. As (1) is the only one of these events that had happened since the thirty years' truce,
itis the most probable;
but the date of the Megarian decree
is unfortunately doubtful, and some suppose, on insufficient evidence, that it was not passed so early as 433 B.C.
23. ἡ τελευταία xdpis—the service that Athens will render to Corinth by refusing the Corcyrean request. ‘ This will be highly opportune, though involving a trifling sacrifice ' (Morris). 25. μεῖζον ἔγκλημα---ἰ(ἢρ complaint that we have
against
you about Megara. (If the first explan. above is right, this ἔγκλημα would be that Athens had violated the thirty years’ truce.) PıceE
39.
1. διὰ κινδύνων— with ἔχειν - ἐπικινδύνως. Claassen constructs τό with πλέον, to which it is objected that πλέον ἔχειν, not τὸ πλέον ἔχειν = πλεονεκτεῖν, ‘be grasping’; and hence Cl.
proposed τι for r6. phrases:
(1) (2) For (1) cf. vii. ἑκουσίων κινδύνων by the preceding
But διὰ. . ἔχειν is a combination of two
διὰ κινδύνων τὴν δύναμιν ἔχειν, διὰ κινδύνων πλέον ἔχειν. 8 τὸ στρατόπεδον διὰ φυλακῆς μᾶλλον ἣ di’ ἔχων. The art. before πλέον is occasioned δύναμις. Stahl constructs τό with Exew, but
the position of the {wo members outside the article—79 . . ἐπαρθέντας and διὰ x.—is against this.
2. περιπεπτωκότες
οἷς.
. κολάζειν— the simplest explan.
is ‘now that we find ourselves in the condition that we spoke of at Sparta, when we urged . .' Thus οἷς Ξ ἐκείνοις &, προείπομεν does double duty, 'spoke of, and urged that’ and τοὺς. . κολάζειν is epexegetic. The only objection is that this is rather artificial. The condition alluded to is that of a city whose allies are in ἁπόστασις, as Corinth holds that Coreyra is from her—óià παντὸς ἀφεστᾶσι. Stahl followed by Classen and others supplies περιπεπτωκώύτα after
192
THUCYDIDES
I
οἷς, ‘now that we find ourselves in the cireumstances in which, as we ourselves urged . .' This is doubtful grammar. Dobree bracketed
τοὺς.
. κολάζειν
as spurious
and
repeated
from
c.
40: this gives an easy construction, and σῴφετέρους instead of ἑαυτοῦ, with sing. αὐτόν τινα, is unusual.
18. τῇ vii.
11.
μὲν ἐν
προτέρᾳ — temporal, δὲ
τῇ
ὑστεραίᾳ
like
(ἐκκλησίᾳ)
μάχῃ
must
TD
mean
πρώτῃ ‘in
the
the assembly met on
the
assembly held on the following day,' according to the meaning of such adjs. in -aios. Cobet read ὑστέρᾳ, ‘in the subsequent assembly.'
We
must
assume
that
next day when a debate was adjourned (and this seems to be
the meaning of xal dis). There is no evidence. 23. σφίσιν — rois Κερκυραίοις. αὐτοῖς — τοῖς ᾿Αθηναίοις.
ἐκέλευον. . ἐλύοντ᾽ Av—the condition expressed from the point of view of Thuc. himself (Forbes). 25. ἐπιμαχίαν---α defensive) alliance.
defensive
(ξυμμαχία,
an
offensive
and
26. τῇ ἀλλήλων.---ο. 15, 2. PAGE 40. 1. καὶ dg—i.e. even if they rejected the Corcyrean request altogether.
ὥς:
οὕτως often after
καί,
ἀλλ᾽,
οὐδ᾽, und.
6. ναντικὸν Ixovaıy —to be regarded as one word. Hence the insertion of τοῖς before vaurixéy is unnecessary. 8. ἐν apáTAq—-contrast the construction at c. 36, 2. 14. Κίμωνος — the great statesman. Plutarch says that he had given this name to his son out of compliment to Sparta.
18. ἐκείνων — τῶν Κερκυραίων. 22. wapeoKevac-ro—im pers. Pack
l.
πέμπτος
αὐτός --οἷ.
c. 61,
41.
1;
116,
1.
The
form
of
into
the
sea
only
in
phrase denotes the chief in command. 2. ka T — ‘opposite.’ 6. ἐξίησι --- of water
discharging
Thuc. and Herod. until Polybius. These geographical details remind us of a similar passage in ii. 102. Mr. Forbes thinks
NOTES
193
that Thuc. mentions the city because there was no town, but only a roadstead at Chimerium.
But in the facts that follow
there is no special significance, and it is more likely that we have here a trace of the manner of the logographers. Thuc., like them, is not averse to imparting information ' by the way.'
8. ἐσβάλλει —the ordinary word in Attic in this sense is ἐμβάλλει. 10.
ἔχει--80. ἡ λίμνη.
pei—sc. ἐνταῦθα.
18. τῆς dymr«pov—partitive πόλεως,
with
a verb,
as
in
ἄλλῃ
τῆς
etc.
20. Tapficav—' were there,’ not ‘arrived.’ atrots—Thuc.
has this curious order several times.
21. ZaxvvOGev—allies of Athens. The interest and policy of Zacynthus coincided with those of Corcyra. 24. παρα- βεβοηθηκότες — ‘along the coast’; cf. παραπλεῖν.
27. τριῶν ἡμερῶν σιτία--cl. τριῶν εἶχον τὰ ἐπιτήδεια, etc.
μηνῶν
μισθός,
ὅσου
28. ὡς ér(—both dat. and accus. are found in the same sense with this expression, aud with & verb of motion the dat. occurs iij. 4, 3; vi. 84, 5. Pace
42.
δ. τὸ δὲ dAAo—the construction shifts.
7. r@v—necessary, because of c. 47, 1. The object of the peculiar order is to draw ἑκάστου els together. ll.
ὡς ἕκαστοι---οἴ. c. 3, 4.
12. ταῖς ἄριστα τῶν νεῶν TÀ«oócaus—notice the order of the partitive gen. : the fule in Attic is that it is not placed in attributive position unless the last word is an adj. or partic., and even then it is rare except in Thuc. : the most exceptional instance of this order is iv. 62 τοὺς τῶν Σικελῶν (‘among the S.") ξυμμάχου-.
16. πολλοὺς μὲν ÓómÀ(ras—in the Pel. War only ten ἐπιβάται were on board ; and it is specially noted (in the case of what battle 1) in the seventh book as exceptional to have many fighting men on a trireme. But in the earlier sea-fights the
194
THUCYDIDES
I
opposing ships were rowed alongside, and the battle was really ‘a land fight on sea.’ 19. ἀπειρότερον tri—‘ still with little experience’ of naval tactics.
because
of
the skill displayed, but for the most part (sc. καρτερά) sembling a land engagement.' The latter clause means
21. τέχνῃ — dat.
of
cause,
‘not
so
much
re“1
(settled) state,’ with es:
the
‘was like a stoutly contested land battle.’ 25. μᾶλλόν τι --- ‘considerably more.’ The phrase is common. 26. καταστάντε!---καθίστημιε means frequently ‘put into a ships were motionless, 27. SxwXo.—the through the intervals in their rear, . . and
the intrans.
‘settle down.’
As
a regular pitched battle was fought. famous manceuvre consisted of ‘rowing of the enemy's line, and thus getting before the ship of the adversary ooul
change its position, of striking it either in the stern, or in some
weak part’ (Grote).
It is first heard of in Herod. vi. 12. PAGE
9. δ. 6. 10. 18.
43.
mapayıyyöpnevar—iterative. μάχης. . ἦρχον .---' take the aggressive.’ πρόρρησιν —4 προείρητο. σποράδαε---΄ in confusion. dofpovs—sc. οὔσας : cf. Xen. Anab. 11. i. 6 πέλται xal
ἅμαξαι ἦσαν φέρεσθαι ἔρημοι. 15. [τε] --- this joins the
whole
clause
οἱ
Κορίνθιοι.
jecdrro to the second. It is scarcely necessary to bracket it. 18. ἀπὸ ἐλάσσονος TAfj9ovs—compare the total numbers, c.
46, ] ; 47, 1.
24. bylyvero—‘was beginning’: better than completion is first alluded to in c. 50, 1. λαμπρῶε— ‘decidedly.’ τότε δή introduces
éyérero—the the decisive
act.
26.
Evvérecey —impers., ‘things came to such a pass.’
Paak 44. 1. τὰ σκάφη μὲν κτλ. ---4ἃ}} iterative, the imperfs. referring to the several huils disabled.
NOTES 3. ἅς
— when
a rel. sentence
antecedent being expressed, Thuc.
195
stands for a substantive,
no
regularly attracts the rel.,
as in c. 87, 3 δικαστὰς ὧν βλάπτουσι. In ii. ἔγνωτε is for ἐγκαρτερεῖν ἐκεῖνα (ποῖ ἐκείνοι) rel. sentence stands as an adjective, the rel. attracted ; cf. e.g. c. 52, 2 αἰχμαλώτων. . obs 2 etc. See n. on p. 87 l. 16.
karadtoeav—not sank, but ‘disabled.’
61 ἐγκαρτερεῖν ἃ ἃ &. But when a is not necessarily . . εἶχον : vii. 1,
The usual way was
to tow them away as prizes. 4. dovebay . . teypev — depending on ἐτράποντο as in ἐτράποντο τὰ πράγματα ἐνδιδόναι ii. 65. Thus érpáwovro has here a double construction. $oreów is an Ionic word, not
found in prose outside Herod. and Thuc. Siexwddovres—the edd. point out that this cannot be the technical dcéxwXAovs—the
object of which, indeed, was
not to
kill, but to disable an enemy's ship (see on c. 49)—but merely alludes to rowing in amongst the enemy's disabled ships.
6. οἱ ἐπὶ τῷ δεξιῷ xépa—the Ambraciots and Megarians (c. 48, 4) who were defeated and pursued to the mainland (c. 49, 6). Itis not possible to see how the conquering Corinthians
on the left could have fallen in with any of the flying right wing unless some of those on the right wing had not fled with the rest towards the mainland ; and that some were left behind is suggested by ἐπὶ πολὺ. . ἐπεχουσῶν.
9. £vvéue fav — plup. in sense, and this clause belongs to what follows.
10. óToto.—not much different from οἵτινες, but denoting, as Stahl points out, that there were no distinguishing marks of dress and appearance to show whether those they fell in with belonged to the winning or losing side. ποῖος for τίς in tragedy.
Cf. the common use of
11. vavpax(a yap—cf. c. 1, 2. 22. καὶ ὅσαι — i.e. those that had taken no
part in the
previous engagement.
26. wrapeéow—only Herod. and Thuc. use the active where Attic generally has πειρῶμαι.
Pack 45. 1. πρύμναν ἐκρούοντο —‘ began
to back,’ so as to retire;
cf. ἀνακρούεσθαι with or without πρύμναν.
196
THUCYDIDES
I
6. ὀλίγαι ἀμύνειν — οἴ, ii. 61 ταπεινὴ ὑμῶν ἡ ἐγκαρτερεῖν ; v. 3, 2 τὰ ὑπάρχοντα βραχέα περιγίγνεσθαι.
διάνοια
i. ὑποτοπήσαντειrare and poetical verb, used by Thuc. several times only in aor. infin. or partic. 9. τοῖς δὲ K«pkvpa(ouw— dat. of agent, which Thuc. with the poets uses with all parts of the passive. 10. ἐπέπλεον ---5.. ai ᾿Αττικαὶ νῆες. With ἐκ τοῦ ἀφανοῦς supply αὐτοῖς, ‘from a quarter where they were invisible.’
12. mplv—‘until’:
here and elsewhere the indic. is used
alter a positive sentence ; but notice οὐχ ἑωρῶντο, and see JM. T.
§ 635.
13. éxetvar—‘ yonder.’ Notice the vivid form. 16. ἡ ἀπαλλαγὴ ἐγένετο= ἀχηλλάγησα».
17. ἐτελεύτα ἐς vixra—pregnant construction. 21. 'AvyBok(Bns—there is some doubt about the name, because &n inscription relating to the expenses of this fleet is extant, and in it Glaucon is mentioned as στρατηγός, and two other names, both mutilated, are given (see crit. note) ; neither name can have been Andocides. However, if Andocides did hold some sort of command
orator Andocides.
in this fleet, he is the grandfather of the
(My opinion is that the text is right, and
that Thuc. has made a mistake here. If Andocides is the wrong name, Leogoras, too, must be due to corruption ; and the
double corruption seems very unlikely.
If Andocides sen. had
held
have
this command,
matter.
the
orator would
alluded
to
the
He mentions that his grandfather had a hand in the
thirty years’ peace.)
26. épp(cavro—subject ‘the Athenian change being characteristic. PAGE
4. βονλόμενοι --- for this
ships, the abrupt
46.
‘sense’
construction
after
vijes
cf. 110, 4.
5. τὰς μὲν ναῦς sense;
elsewhere
— poetical construction it
is
absol
or
has
ταῖς
with αἴρω in this ναυσίν.
Croiset
compares αἴρειν στόλον in tragedy.
12. ἐπισκενὴν οὐκ obcay—sc. ὁρῶντες, the two examples of τὰ ἄπορα being given in different form. 13. ToU . . πλοῦ — περὶ τοῦ πλοῦ, anticipating ὅπῃ κομισθήσον-
ται: the gen. placed thus at the head of a sentence with a verb
NOTES
197
of speaking or thinking about is common in Plato ; and the constn. comes down from epic. For . ef. Soph. O. T. 317, Trach. 169 τοῦ κασιγνήτου τί ops ; Plat. fep. 576 D εὐδαιμονίας ὡσαύτως N ἄλλως πως κρίνεις ;
18. ävev κηρυκείου--οἴ, c. 146. Had they sent him with a herald's wand they would have admitted a state of war, and treated the Athenians as enemies.
21. πολέμον Äpxovres— ‘acting as aggressors in war and breaking treaties’: in reality the ref. is to the thirty years’ treaty,
but the vague expression heightens the effect.
26. Avere—we expect λύειν. PAGE
εἰ δ᾽ nearly Ξε ἐπεὶ 9. 47.
1. τῶν δὲ Κερκυραίων —this is divided into τὸ μὲν στρατό πεδὸν and οἱ δὲ ᾿Αθηναῖοι, possibly because the Athenians and Corcyreans
together make
up
the other,
or Corcyrean,
side;
possibly by a slight anacoluthon. 2. Ócov —' as far as they ' were within hearing. 16. τά τε νανάγια καὶ vex —the re is answered by καὶ τροπαῖον ἀντέστησαν. The Corcyreans were able to recover their dead without asking permission. Hence, technically, they could support a claim to have won a success.
17. κατὰ odas—‘ opposite them,’ i.e. ‘on their coast.’ The τά before κατά makes τοὺς: νεκρούς unlikely. 18. (ὑπὸ) ἀνέμον, Ss— ‘a wind which.’ 20. τοῖς ἐν τῇ νήσῳ Zuß6row—Sybota must be the name of some place on one of the group of islands collectively called Sybota. 28. τριάκοντα ναῦε —c. 49, 5: ἀνελόμενοι c. 54, 1: ὅτι ὑπεχώρησαν c. 51, 1: οὐκ ἀντεπόπλοον c. 52, 2. The claims put forward by the Corcyreans are set out in a formal style ; notice esp. the repetition of ἐπειδὴ 'A. ἦλθον. Pact
48.
11. xowóy —'in common.’ Corcyra must have had some share in the colonisation of Anactorium. 16. ly θεραπείᾳ el oy—'trested them with great consideration,’ cf. θεραπεύω and θεράπων. These prisoners returned in 427 B.c. and civil war broke out in Corcyra.
198
THUCYDIDES
I
19. 8vydpa—‘ influence.’ 21. περιγίγνεται — not 'defeated, but ‘maintained ground.’ ch had not secured Epidamnus.
its
25. ἐς τοὺς ' A. —cf. c. 66, 1. Pace
49.
1. διάφορα— ‘constituting matters of dispute leading war.’ 2. πρασσόντων Swres—‘ forming plans of.’ 7. φόρον ὑποτελεῖς--ο. 19.
8. τὸ ἐς Παλλήνην
to
— ie. the southern wall (see map), so
that Potidaea would be accessible from the sea.
10. ἐπιδημιουργούε--- δημιουργός is known from inscriptions
to be the title of magistrates
in many Dorian
cities,
ἐπι-
would mean chief magistrates exercising some sort of general
supervision. 13. II«pB(ikkov— Perdiccas II. of Macedon, son of Alexander the Philhellene. His shifty policy gave Athens much trouble in the Pel. War. Before 432 he was in alliance with Athens; but he presently enoouraged Potidaea to revolt because Athens was in alliance with his brother Philip and his cousin Derdas. In 431 he was reconciled for a time to Athens.
14. ἐπὶ @pdxns—prop. ‘in the direction of Thrace, the regular way of referring collectively to the Greek cities on the coast of Thrace, esp. Chalcidice. 15. ταῦτα δὲ «TÀ. —'the battle . . had only recently been fought when the A...
19. See p. 21. 25. tion
.'
φανερῶς Hön—their hatred of Athens is of earlier origin. 881. 22 note. ἐπεπολέμωτο--ο. 86, 1. Es τε πέμπων. . καὶ. . vpoceroutro—the oonstrucfrom the partic. to the finite verb. This form of
anacoluthon is by no means confined to Thuc. ; but cf. e.g. ii. 47, 8 λεγόμενον
μὲν.
. οὐ μέντοι. Paar
1. Tpocerowiro—'tried
. ἐμνημονεύετο γενέσθαι.
50.
to. . .'
8. ἔτνχον γάρ introduces what follows, as in c. 31, 2.
NOTES 10.
199
atro) — Perdiccas.
11. Béx«a—there
more belonging
would
thus
be eleven
στρατηγοί,
and five
to the same year are mentioned inc. 61.
As
the number of στρατηγοί was regularly ten, Krüger altered δέκα to τεσσάρων (δ) But instead of μετ’ ἄλλων τεσσάρων we
expect
πεμπτοῦ
αὐτοῦ.
Perhaps
Thuc.
wrote
only
wer’
ἄλλων, and had no record of the number ; cf. c. 51, 4.
20. [&rpaccov}—this spoils the structure of the period, for the principal sentence must begin at τότε δή. There is, for cxample, a similar ἔξεστιν in viii. 27.
intrusion
of
a verb—pereixor—in
ii. 16;
22. ἐκ πολλοῦ---' for a long time.’
23. αἱ νῆες al—‘the ships that were to operate against M. (c. 57, 6) were sent just as much against themselves.’ 25. τὰ TÉ q—c. 10, 4; cf. παν-τελής, having full τέλος.
97. κατὰ τὸν again in ii. 84.
καιρὸν
rotrov—this
Pace
occurs
after τότε
δή
51.
4. ἀνοικίσασθαι---ο. 7.
5. μίαν πόλιν L.—predicate. 6. τῆς ἑαντοῦ γῆς --- partitive, with ἔδωκε. τῆς M may be in apposition, but perhaps depends on περὶ τὴν λίμνην. The construction would be improved with τά before περί, as νέμομαι περί is unusual νέμεσθαι cultivate and live from ' (Forbes).
depends
on
ἔδωκε:
‘to
14. ἀφεστηκότα ---' in a state of revolt.’ 16. ἔνναφεστῶτα---ηοἱ ‘with Perdiccas,’ but ‘together.’ 18. rb wp&érov—this was their original purpose. about Potidaea had been added subsequently.
The orders
20. ävaßev—‘ from the upper country.’ 21. tv Toóro—' hereupon.' 24. wep(—common
in Thuc. with dat. after verbs of fear,
and this is usual in Attic. 93 is unusual.
ἐφοβεῖτο περὶ τοῦ πολιτικοῦ in viil.
27. τοὺς πάντας--in all.’
200
THUCYDIDES PaGE
4.
ν..
ἐπειδή,
dp
I
52.
ἤ ---οἴ. τοὐναντίον 4.
οὗ or ὅτε in place
We might have ἐπεί,
of this.
(f, not 7, is probably
necessary. The confusion of the two is common.) 7. τῶν Tól«v—objective ; cf. Antig. 11 μῦθος φίλων.
9. ἐπιπαριόνταε --- technical word of an army advancing on
an objective.
The
force
seems
to have
gone
by land
vapórras of the Mss. is almost certainly a blunder).
(ém-
Cf. 4nab.
III. iv. 30 xarà τὸ ὄρος ἐπιπαριόντες ἀφίκοντο eis τὰς κώμας.
14. τοὺς TpoTépovs —c. 57, 6. 15. pun—Thessalonica. 16. wpooxaßetönevor—the form does duty as aorist ; cf. c. 24, 7 ; p. 1201. 5.
20. παρεληλνθώς---᾿ the arrival of.’ 22. is
vay— Beroea is in Macedonia, and
the route.
Herbst proposed to read
περαιωθέντες
seems out of
ἐκεῖθεν
for
es Βέροιαν κἀκεῖθεν. The text cannot be regarded as certain. Grote thinks another Beroea, otherwise unknown, must be meant.
ἐπὶ
Στρέψαν — this
well-known
conjecture
for
ἐπιστρέ-
ψαντες suits excellently with πειράσαντες τοῦ χωρίου, which with the Mss. reading gives no sense. The exact position of
Strepsa is unknown ; but no objection lies in the fact that it is not
mentioned
by
Herod.
in
a list of Greek
cities
on the
Thermaic Gulf (vii. 133), as it may very well have lain outside thelimits with which Herod. is dealing. Pace
53.
6. πρὸς ᾿Ολύνθον— ‘on the side towards Olynthus’ near Potidaea (2 τῆς πόλεως). The other reading Ὀλύνθῳ, is inconsistent with 8 8, and as Jowett says, Aristeus cannot have left Potidaea unprotected.
8. ἔξω τῆς πόλεως — the plan of bringing the necessaries outside a city and selling them to troops encamped there was often adopted when it was desirable that the men should not go inside.
We hear of it elsewhere in Thuc. and in the Anab.
14. τοῦ ᾿Αριστέως . . ἔχοντι---ἔχοντα (see crit. note) would be regular before the infin. ; but ἔχοντι is likely to have been altered to this.
The dat.
is used os if ἔδοξε τῷ ᾿Αριστεῖ had
NOTES preceded.
The
only exact
parallels
201 cited for this are from
omer and tragedy ; cf. Soph. O. T. 850 ἐννέπω σὲ. . ἐμμένειν . ὡς ὄντι. In order to avoid the change, TQ μέν for τὸ μέν
agreeing with ἔχοντι has been proposed ; but the expression so produced (rg .. ἔχοντι) is not very probable: we should expect αὐτῷ μέν.
16. τοὺς ἕξω ἰσθμοῦ--- the (other) allies from beyond the Isthmus’ (of Pallene). ἰσθμός is treated as a proper name.
19. ἐν
e αὑτῶν ---ἶ. 6. himself being on their north side
and the Chalcidians and Bottiaeans attacking them city. 24. τοὺς ἐκεῖθεν —cf. c. 8, 2; 18, 1.
from tlie
25. ἀναστήσαντες τὸ o.—‘ having broken up the camp’ at Gigonus. PAGE
1. ξυνέμισγον --- the battle not in this battle that
Socrates
54.
of Potidaea. saved
It was
probably
Alcibiades’ life ; but in
another battle at Potidaea in 430 R.c.
4. λογάδες — for the ordinary ἐπιλέκτοι, not used by other Attic prose writers. (Suidas, s.v. λογάδην.) τὸ καθ᾽ éavrots —‘ the division that faced them.’
5. ἐπὶ πολύ---οἵ ground covered. 7. é τὸ rexos—of Potidaea. 12. BSvax.wSuvetdoy—deliberative.
χωρήσας with ὁποτέρωσε.
18. 8’ otv—for uss. γοῦν : see the same correction at c. 10, 5. Here δ᾽ οὖν suggests a hesitation on the part of Aristeus, the details of which Thuc. has omitted.
14. ὡς ἐς ἐλάχιστον xwplov—i.e. to concentrate his division
80 that closely united it might force its way. 16.
παρὰ τὴν χηλήν-
the south, as it would
the object is to enter Potidaea from
have been risky with the enemy in the
way to have forced a way in at the north.
The χηλή is a mole
or break-water running out into the sea, which at low tide is shallow, on the east side of the city.
18. &évofaAéóy—this is used
specially of losing men by
a
sudden attack of an enemy.
19. &wéxa—sc. a common
Olynthus ; ἀπεῖχε (see crit. note) would be
use of imperf. in giving geographical
details;
cf.
202
THUCYDIDES
I
e.g. li. 18 τοῦ . . τείχους στάδιοι ἦσαν κτλ. ; many exx. from Anabasis in Kühner's n. on 4nab. 1. iv. 9. Of course the pres.
is also equally dh ere. 20. 22. 26.
possible, and ἔστι favours it here. (The imperf. is used when the fact given implies the result of the observation : so that it is not right to draw a distinction
ἔστι---80. the ground between the two cities. 4p8n—to suinmon the troops from Olynthus. κατεσπάσθη--]ΌΡ. in sense. Pace
55.
l. παρεγένοντο---ἐν τῇ μάχῃ.
6. ᾿Αθηναίων S4—the inscription placed over the monument of these men
in the
Manual, p. 59.
Ceramicus
is in the
Brit.
Mus. :
Hicks,
The last of the three stanzas is :
"Avdpas μὲν πόλις ἥδε ποθεῖ καὶ δῆμος "EpexOéws.
πρόσθε Ποτειδαίας ol θάνον ἐν προμάχοις παῖδες ᾿Αθηναίων. yvxàs δ᾽ ἀντίρροπα θέντες ἠλλάξαντ᾽ ἀρετήν---καὶ πατρίδ᾽ εὐκλέϊσαν. « δ e
τόν
Thuc.
had not heard the nuinbers of the allies who
7. ἐκ---οἴ, πρός, which might have heen used here, c. 62, 1.
8. reixos—this is deleted by Classen and others ; but the sense is ‘they cut off (from communication with the north) the
northern wall’—of course by building See below 8 3. ἐφρούρουν is intrans.
a wall farther north.
10. árex roy —not * unfortified, which is not true (see c. 66, 2), but ‘not walled off,’ ‘ not isolated’ from the south.
13. 86vaBávres— by sea. 14. yevopévois—the aor, though weakly supported, is necessary, ‘if they should have divided’ being clearly the sense. In vi. 100 we have correctly φοβούμενοι μὴ σφίσι δίχα γιγνομένοις ῥᾷον μάχωνται, because there the sense is ‘if they made a practice of.’ 15. ἐν τῇ wéAa—at Athens.
18. Popplova—the celebrated admiral. 20. ’Adtrios—Ionic gen. of" Aóvris : cf. e.g. Τήρης Thpew ii. 29. o
NOTES
203
28. ἀπετείχισε τὸ... reixos—the bracketing of τεῖχος makes the sense ‘walled it off on the south side’; cf. τὸ δ᾽ és τὴν Παλλήνην above § 1 (where, however, τεῖχος may be supplied).
But ‘walled off the south wad?’ may very well be the meaning
as above in 1. 8. Classen retains τεῖχος here and renders ‘ built across the south line of circumvallation.’ This is scarcely the meaning of ἀποτειχίζω.
26. γανσὶν ἅμα d$.—' with a fleet blockading it.’ Page 56. 1. ἔννεβούλενε. . ἤθελε. . Erade— like ἐκέλευε: such words being often used in imperf. when ἃ speaker is giving advice. 3. ἄνεμον rnpfjcact—cf. τηρήσαντες τὸν πορθμόν vi. 2. 6. τὰ ἐπὶ ToÓTou —cÍí. ὡς ἐπὶ τούτοις vi. 45; vii. 45 ; ‘what was now necessary. Ar. Eccles. 82 τἀπὶ τούτοις δράσομεν.
7. ὅπως also depends on παρασκευάζειν. τὰ ἔξωθεν —referring to what he could do for Potidaea when he got outside. 10. Σερμνλιῶν . . woddAobs—Sermyle on the west coast of Sithonia. ll. de . . ἔπρασσεον---" negotiated ἔπραξαν ii. 7.
with’;
cf. e.g. πρὸς ὃν
12. Sry =‘ as to how.’ 13. μετὰ 5é—now Legins the costly siege of Potidaea. 18, αἰτίαι pév—answered by οὐ μέντοι. What follows shows that αἰτίαι alludes only to the dispute about Potidaea—noé to the affair of Corcyra as well. τ vro — this (προε-), not προσεγεγένηντο, is the reading of all good Mss. As the ref. is to Potidaea only we
should expect either προσεγεγένηντο *had been added' (to the Corcyrean dispute)—and fhis is read by many edd.—or αἰτίαι
μὲν καὶ αὗται : cf. c. 56, 1 xal τάδε ξυνέβη. . διάφορα. But πρου- can stand; for now it is ᾿Αθηναίοις καὶ Πελοποννησίοις,
not merely ’A. καὶ Κορινθίοις. Thuc. clearly means that the Corcyrean affair did not constitute a ground of war with Pel. in generai ; and now explains why the dispute about Potidaea was such, though even that was a matter for Corinth on her own account in the first instance. mpo- means ‘before Sparta
took any pert.’
Cf. c. 67, 1.
204
THUCYDIDES
25. σφίσιν with ἐλθόντες.
—with ἐμάχοντο,
I
not as in c. 13, ὃ ; 27,1;
61,1
27. ξυνερράγει--ξυρρήγνυμι. PAGE 57. 4. Tt—'80.' παρεκάλουν — 'invited,
belonged to Sparta. 6. κατεβόων — with ‘shout down.’
gen.
not
by
'loudly
formal
summons,
accuse';
with
which
accus.,
7. σπονδάς--ο. 53, 2.
9. $avepés—they were dependent allies of Athens. 10. κρύφα---8ς.. πρεσβευόμενοι. 12. κατὰ τὰς cov5ás—the thirty years’ truce ; nothing is known of this particular clause in it. 13. προσπαρακαλέσαντες —thus supporting the Corinthian invitation. Steup renders ‘summoned before the assembly,’ holding that the embassies had already arrived in Sparta as the result of the Cor. invitation. This is impossible, unless we alter the text to προσκαλέσαντες : see c. 87, 4. τῶν ξνμμάχων re—partitive ; edd. generally omit re and make τῶν ξυμμάχων depend on ef τις (xal=‘also’). If re is
sound, then ef τις must mean any one else in the position of Aegina:
no other state outside the Pel. alliance seems to have
sent ; see c. 69, 1 ; 87, 4.
14. &XXo—besides those wrongs alleged by Corinth and Aegina. Some accept Reiske's ἄλλος with or without the τε. The invitation is to all who hold that in their case Athens had iu any particular broken the thirty years' truce.
15. ποιήσαντες ---' called.’ 20. dpyerGar—sec c. 139. 24.
ἐπεῖπον---' added ' to what the others had said.
25. τὸ πιστόν—' honesty,' the good faith you show in your public and private life. This is the outcome of the ‘Lyourgean’ system. Cf. what Xen. says in the Polity of the Lac., of their virtues, which, when he wrote, were a thing of
the past: ‘ They endeavoured to be worthy to lead . . Others
would go to Sparta and ask to be led by her against those who
NOTES were
thought
guilty
205
of wrong-doing.
. . Nowadays
they
obey neither God nor the ordinances of Lycurgus."
26. καθ᾽ ὑμᾶς abrovs— ‘among yourselves.’ 27. ἀπιστοτέρους is τοὺς &AXovs—i.e. és (ἡμᾶς) τοὺς ἄλλους, hence λέγωμεν. Some, however, take ἐς τοὺς ἄλλους fjv τι X. together= ‘if we bring any charge against others.’ 28. ἀπ᾽ αὐτοῦ---ἰ.6. ἀπὸ τοῦ ἀπιστοτέρους εἶναι. It is a mark of prudence or sobriety, but it leads you into more mistakes than you would make if you were less cautious in believing
complaints.
Pace 58.
δ. τῶν λεγόντων --(τόδε) τῶν λεγόντων, so that clause governs τῶν λεγόντων, cf. c. 52, 3. The gen. similarly used with θαυμάζω.
the ὡς is often
6. τῶν. . διαφόρων ---' private interests,’ i.e. the interests of their city apart from the interests of the Pel. confederacy. ἰδίᾳ does
not mean ‘individual’ here.
For such complaints to
Sparta see c. 90, and for the negligence of Sparta sce c. 118, 2. 7. πάσχειν---we begin to. . '
9. ἐν ols—(1) some render, ‘before whom’; cf. e.g. c. 88 ; (2) others, after Classen, with οὐχ ἥκιστα, ‘and we among them have the best right,’ as in viil. 68 ἐν τοῖς ξυγκαταλύουσι . .
πρῶτος ἦν. 10. οὐχ
The latter suits the passage better.
8e@—‘inasmuch
ἥκιστα.
We
as’;
should
also the greatest right.’
the
render
καί
balances
‘inasmuch
|
μέγιστα
with
as . . , we
have
15. el8óo'.— sc. ὑμῖν.
16.
μακρηγορεῖν,
ξυμμάχους). how
can
And
Aegina
See c. 67, 3 εἴ ris.
as for ἐπεὶ
ἐκείνων
ὧν — most
τοὺς
edd.
supply
ἡμᾶς
(-Ξ: τοὺς
μέν is then explained as Aegina;
be included
under
the
ξύμμαχοι
of
but
Sparta?
It is on all grounds better to understand ὧν (i.e.
τῶν Ἑλλήνων
Conradt who is followed by Steup.
from
τὴν ᾿Ελλάδα)
with
Thus τοὺς μέν naturally
refers to the subject allies of Athens, against whom
it was a
constant complaint that she ‘enslaved the Greeks.’ 18. ἡμετέροις £.—Potidaea and her allies in Chalcidice: since they had revolted allies of Corinth.
from
Athens,
they
are reckoned
as
19. wpotraperxevacpévovs—the relative is now lost sight of.
206
THUCYDIDES
I
Toe fjmovrac—pass., “shall become involved in war.’ 20. ὑπολαβόντες.---ἃ gross misrepresentation. 23. ἀποχρῆσθαιtions)
in
‘to make full use of (as a base of opera-
dealing with . . .'
(Poppo's view that αὐτοῖς — rois
ἐπὶ O. is to be supplied to ἀποχρῆσθαι 15 clearly wrong.) 27.
κρατῦγαι κτλ.
—see cc. 90 and 107.
28. ἐς τόδε-- μέχρι τοῦδε. PAGE 59.
1. ἀποστεροῦντες —a
good
ex.
of the
proper
meaning,
‘withhold’ what belongs to another. τοὺς ὑπ᾽ ἐκείνων 8.—the subject allies of Athens; see c. 68, 3. Sparta in the Pel. War claimed to be the ‘liberator of
Greece.'
She had gained the reputation by her opposition to
the τύραννοι.
2. τοὺς ὑμετέρους -the plain meaning is that A. has begun to act aggressively towards Megara and Corinth. (Perhaps ἡμετέρους used loosely as in c. 68, 3 is right here—see crit. note —or ὑμετέρους should be read there.) 5. αὐτὸ Spq—c. b, 2. τὴν ἀξίωσιν. . déperat— ' enjoys a reputation for generosity " —lit. ‘that, i.e. her, reputation . .,' gained by such actions.
7. μόλις
δὲ
transposition
νῦν
for
ἀλλὰ
ye— see
crit.
viv τε μόλις
note.
If we
stand ; but γε is certainly idiomatic here. 8. ἐπὶ bavepois— ‘with a clear issue before us.’ explains this clause. The
10. οἱ γὰρ
transl.
δρῶντες
‘for they
formed and without
xTX.—a
who
assume
a
Evy. καὶ κτλ. the re might
χρῆν γάρ
notoriously difficult sentence.
act advance
with
plans already
delaying, against men who have not made
up their minds,' in ref. to Athenian energy, is simple; but the statement is not true when made universal, and we certainly
look for a direct ref. to the Athenians (hence the conjectures of γε. οἵπερ, ol γὰρ ᾿Αθηναῖοι for ol γάρ). Classen rendered ol γάρ as ‘for they,’ like οἱ δέ, i.e. the Athenians, but himself doubted it; there is no prose ex. of 6 before γάρ us pronoun, and more
important,
it is very artificial to separate δρῶντες.
I should
like to refer this general statement, with the transl. given above, to the conduct of the Lac., so that the general sense is ‘men of action (which you are not) take immediate steps, with their
NOTES
207
minds made up before their opponents are resolved on their course.’
The Athenians have not yet decided on war, and now
is your time
σκοπεῖν
καθ᾽ ὅ τι ἀμυνούμεθα.
It is ἃ case for τὸ
προεπιβουλεύειν, not τὸ ἀντεπιβουλεύειν. I think that ol ᾿Αθηναῖοι in the next sentence strongly favours my suggestion, as we then get 8 proper antithesis.
12. οἵᾳ ὁδῷ . . καὶ ὅτι κατ᾽ óX(qov—the two clauses after ἐπιστάμεθα are differently expressed : we should say rather, ‘we know that the À. are encroaching on others and how they do it.'
(The
sentence
is awkward:
Cobet
bracketed
xai
ὅτι.
Possibly something is lost after ᾿Αθηναῖοι.) 15. olöpevor—‘ while they think,’ as they do at present. When they conclude that you know, but do not care, 'they will press on with determination,' and no longer κατ᾽ ὀλίγον. 19. τῇ μελλήσει---΄ intentions! 2 τῷ μέλλειν ἀμύνασθαι.
21. διπλασιον v—see c. 128, 6 ; mind the tense. δύναμιν is evidently & gloss on the unusual αὔξησιν, for which, as applied to Athens, see c. 89, 1.
22. dodadets—‘sure,’ though
slow;
cf. Soph.
0.7.
cited in L. ἃ 8., φρονεῖν γὰρ ol ταχεῖς οὐκ ἀσφαλεῖς.
617,
(In all
other places in Thuc. ἀσφαλής= ‘secure,’ but that is no reason why it should not mean this meaning !) ὧν — ἀλλ᾽ ὑμῶν.
ὃ λόγος
τοῦ ἔργου
‘sure’ here:
he must have known of
ἐκράτει --- so ii. 42 οὐκ ἂν πολλοῖς...
ἰσόρροπος... ὁ λόγος τῷ ἔργῳ φανείη, ‘there are but few cases in which report does not outweigh fact.’ 6 λόγος ὑμῶν-Ξ ‘the
report about you,’ your reputation ; cf. p. 52 1. 7. 24. ἐκ περάτων yf)s—proverbial of remote countries. πρότερον 4 with infin., a rare constn. except in Herod. Thuc., Antiphon. 25. τὰ wap Üyév—' your forces.’ 28. ἐπελθεῖν abro(—together: so βούλεσθε μᾶλλον. PAGE 60. l. ἐς τύχας x.—‘ expose yourselves to the chances of war.’ 2. Üvyarerépovs—sc. than they were.
3. περὶ aire . . abakdvra—cf. vi. 33, 5 κἂν περὶ σφίσιν αὐτοῖς τὰ πλείω πταίωσιν : Aristoph. Par 905 περὶ ταῖσι xau-
208
THUCYDIDES
παῖς.
. wemrwkotes:
νεορράντῳ
Soph.
Ajax
I 828
πεπτῶτα
τῷδε περὶ
ξίφει.
4. 5. years' 7. 8.
τὰ πλείω---5ο. than through you. ἡμᾶς- we, your allies. Thuc. is referring to the thirty truce, which was a set-back to Athens for the time being. tpérepar—‘in you,’ of help from you. καὶ ἀπαρασκεύονε---καί is explained by its correspond-
ence
with
διὰ τὸ πιστεῦσαι:
because
they
had
confidence
in
Sparta, they remained a/so (as & consequence) unprepared (E. Chambry). 9. (6e pav —gnonic. 10. ἐπ ἔχθρᾳ τὸ πλέον A alrig— ‘to show our enmity, but rather to complain.’ 12. φίλων. . &Opév—objective. αἰτία in this second sent-
ence — τὸ ἐπ᾽ αἰτίᾳ λέγειν, but ἔχθρα is not equivalent to τὸ er’ ἔχθρᾳ λέγειν, so Thuc. substitutes κατηγορία, which is. The
habit of defining terms, cominon in Thuc., is, as Croiset remarks here, derived from Prodicus of Ceos, who gives & well-known specimen of his skill in this line in the Protagoras. Demosth.
imitates this passage, Androt. 22. üpapravóvrey —milder than ἁμαρτόντων. 14. &£vo.—‘ have a right.’ 16. ἄλλως re xal—this clause must give a reason for the claim just made, and this can only be if διαφερόντων here= ‘the interests’ at stake, and not ‘differences’ between you and Athens. But διαφέροντας presently has the other sense. 20. ὑμῶν with
διαφέροντας.
καὶ ὡς---καί is ‘nay’ or ‘in fact.’ 21. νεωτεροποιοί kTÀ. —we have echoes of this famous com parison in Deinosth.
22. ἐπινοῆσαι öfes—cf. Dem. Ol. 8, 15 γνῶναι πάντων ὑμεῖς ὀξύτατοι.
24. σῴζειν --8.. ὀξεῖς, sarcastic. ériyvévar—‘adopt further measures’ beyond a resolution to preserve what you have got. οὐδὲ rávaykxata—contrast ἐπιγνῶναι μηδέν. The last clause — καὶ οὐκ ὀξεῖς ἐστε ἔργῳ οὐδὲ τ. ét. ‘what will just do.’
By τἀναγκαῖα he means
26. παρὰ γνώμην -- γνώμη here and below prob. = * judgment,
NOTES
209
forethought': the A. are ever taking risks that their judgment forbids them to venture on ; you hesitate to follow the sure indications of your judgment. There is an evident allusion to the favourite contrast between γνώμη and τύχη.
28. εὐέλπιδες---ἰὰ Ar. Av. Euelpides personifies the venturesome character of Athenians. PAGE 61.
4. καὶ
μήν
in
oratory
draws
attention
to
ἃ
new
and
striking point, ‘then again.’
5. ἐνδημοτάτονυς---ἃ marked trait in the Spartan character which was much
modified by the Pel. War ; though for a long
time S. was deficient in vigour in the war. 7. τῷ ἐπελθεῖν — aggression. There is no need
ἐξελθεῖν ; cf. § 7, and
the contrast
is as
old as the
to read Odyssey ;
v 27 οὐ μὲν γάρ τι θάμ᾽ ἀγρὸν ἐπέρχεαι . . | ἀλλ᾽ ἐπιδημεύεις.
9. ἐξέρχονται . . ἀναπίπτουσιν---οΧρΙ απο (by Bonitz) as ἃ metaphor from boxing : to follow up an advantage )( to be forced back —celerique elapsus vulnere cessit, Acn. v. 445.
10. rois μὲν σώμασιν.
. τῇ δὲ yvópg—the points of this
rhetorical passage are two: (1) the A. give their lives just as much as the S. for their city, but the A. regard their lives as of little worth, while the S. devote theinselves entirely to the care of the body as the most precious thing they can offer to their city ; (2) the A. use their intelligence in the service of
their city, and for that end they cultivate their minds, whereas the S. neglect them. Thuc. has obscured his meaning by
introducing a contrast between ἀλλοτριώτατος 'not their own' (but of course belonging to their city) and οἰκειότατος ‘ nearest
and dearest to them.' The Spartans too gave their lives for their city, but they regarded them as οἰκειότατος. 13. ἃ μὲν äv—i.e. when they they have hit upon, they regard
do not carry out a new plan the failure as a loss of some-
thing that belongs to them. 15. πρὸς τὰ μέλλοντα---ἴῃ comparison with what is to be done.’ 16. τυχεῖν mpäfavres— ‘that in reality they have done,’ a very common meaning of τυγχάνω with partic. : e.g. Plat. Gorg. p. 468 D οἰόμενος ἄμεινον
εἶναι,
Tvyxávec
δὲ ὃν κάκιον.
TOv καὶ πείρᾳ o.—'‘ if they fail too in anything they attempt.’ καί (in ref. to ἃ àv ἐπελθύντες κτήσωνται) emphasises the phrase.
210
THUCYDIDES
1
17. éw\fpecav—iterative. 18. μόνοι
y&o— possession
and
desire,
‘have’ and
overlap, so impetuous are these Athenians. 20. καὶ ταῦτα xrA.—imitated by Demosth.
‘hope’
de Cor.
(Athens) ἀγωνιζομένη περὶ πρωτείων καὶ τιμῆς kal δόξης δυνεύουσα πάντα τὸν αἰῶνα διατετέλεκε. (A misuse of poetical αἰών is that of Polus τέχνη ap. Plat. Gorg. init.) a fine stroke of style that at the end of the contrast here, antithesis is dropped and Athens alone is spoken of.
24. éoprfjv—predicate.
208 κινthe It is the
It is not likely that there is any
ref. here, as the Schol. who is followed by some edd. supposes, to the refusal of Sparta to set out for war during festivals. The
passage is hyperbolical, and is spoiled by making it too precise. μήτε and re correspond. 25. οὐχ ἧσσον. . ἤ-- μᾶλλον 1$. PAGE 62.
1. dav—sc. ἡσυχίαν ἔχειν. 3. raurms— subject ; τοιαύτης πόλεως pred., lit. ‘this (city) that is opposed to you being such a city.’
4. διαμέλλετε---' persist in. . .' 5. οἴεσθε «TÀ. —' you think that peace lasts longest not for those who in using their forces confine themselves to what is right, but (none the less) by their resolution show that, if wronged, they will not put up with it: instead of that, you deal out fair treatment with the object of not annoying others
and, where you defend yourselves, of avoiding harm to yourselves.’
(1)
τὸ
ἴσον
véuere
represents
δίκαια
πράσσετε
with
slight modification : ‘ fair treatment to you means (a) not pro-
voking others and (b) overlooking a wrong if self-defence will entail suffering on you.' (2) practised by Sparta is explained as an attempt . . βλάπτεσθαι. (All other explanations seem
you find that ἐπιτρέπειν as μὴ λυπεῖν τε (1) to render
ἀμυνόμενοι μὴ B. as if it were μὴ d. B., (2) to strain the meaning of τὸ ἴσον νέμετε : νέμω is not ‘control’ here; cf. p. 103
l. 25. 9. ἀλλ’ ἐπὶ κτλ. —there is anacoluthon here, since strictly we ought to have ἀλλ᾽ (ἐκείνοις) of ἂν. . νέμωσι corresponding to οὐ τούτοις κτλ.
But the change greatly heightens the effect.
ll. μόλις δ’ üv—even if A. were as conservative as you, it would be almost
impossible μὴ λυπεῖν τε ἄλλους καὶ αὐτοὶ ἀμυνό-
μενοι μὴ βλάπτεσθαι.
NOTES
211
12. νῦν δέ---΄ but in fact.’ 14. πρὸς abrobs— ‘as compared with theirs.’ ὥσπερ
κτλ.
—full
form:
ὥσπερ
τέχνης
(‘in
an
ἐπιγιγνόμενα (‘what is new’) κρατεῖν ἀνάγκη, ἐπιτηδευμάτων κτὰ. τέχνης is possessive, with τὰ €.
art’) οὕτω
rà καὶ
16. τὰ ἀκίνητα vépipa—alluding to the conservative νόμιμα of Lycurgus: τάδε. . κατέστησεν νόμιμα Xen. Lac. Pol. 7, 1.
ὁ Λυκοῦργος ἐν τῇ Σπάρτῃ
17. πρὸς πολλὰ. . lévac—‘ those on whose resources there are many demands need constantly to think out new devices’; cf. ἐπιτεχνᾶσθαι, plan something untried before, Herod. ii. 2, 3;
119, 2. 20.
ἐπὶ πλέον bój.év—* more than yours’;
μέχρι.
. τοῦδε
cf. ]. 14.
ὡρίσθω — cf. Aeschines
3, 24 μέχρι
τοῦδε
εἰρήσθω μοι ‘so far and no farther,’ ‘let this be the limit of.’ Strictly we have a fusion of— (1) ‘So far let your slowness have proceeded,' (2) ‘ Here let your slowness end.’ Cf. on p. 69 I. 26. 22. ὑπεδέξασθε---866 c. 58, 1.
26. érépay—i.e.
πρὸς
τοὺς
Such an alliance was formed
᾿Αργείους, between
says
the
Corinth and
Scholiast. Argos in
421 B.C.
28. 4pós—' in the eyes of.’ 29. τῶν αἰσθανομένων ---΄ intelligent
men.’
The rendering
' men who take notice of our actions' does not suit the context.
All Greece must ‘note’ an alliance formed
by Corinth ; not
any
τῶν
special
part
of Greece;
but
ἀνθρώπων
could hardly mean τῶν Ἑλλήνων here.
αἰσθανομένων
"Those who look below
the surface of things will not condemn Corinth. abs., as in v. 26 αἰσθανόμενος
τῇ ἡλικίᾳ.
That
αἰσθάνομαι is this limitation
of ἀνθρώπων does not stand in the same relation to the noun as τῶν ὁρκίων stands to θεῶν is not 8 valid objection in Thuc. PAGE 63.
l. ἐρημίαν ----᾿ isolation.’ ἄλλοις---ἰὰ quest of an alliance. 2. οἷς
ἂν
ξννομόσωσι — the
parties
to
a ξυμμαχία
‘the same friends and enemies’: hence the point.
have
3. pevoOpey — ‘remain firm,’ pregnant sense fixed by ὑμῶν.
212
THUCYDIDES
5. ξννηθεστέρονε --- ac. ὑμῶν with οὔτε γὰρ κτλ.).
7. μὴ ἐλάσσω- - proleptic.
(not
I
ὑμῶν
προθύμων
ὄντων,
as
ἐξηγοῦμαι of exercising ἡγεμονία
in a league appears to take accus. or dat.
9. τῶν δὲ ᾿Αθηναίων ἔτνχε yáp—cf. c. 115, 4; viii. 30. The gen. follows the constn. of the clause immediately following, and this produces a confusion of constn. between ol δ᾽ 'A. (ἔτυχον γὰρ. . παροῦσα) ὡς ἤσθοντο and τῶν δ᾽ "A. ἔτυχε πρεσβεία παροῦσα καὶ ὡς ἤσθοντο. The anacoluthon matter of degree.
13.
is lessened by deleting καί, but it is only 8
wapırnrla— Thuc. alone among prose writers affects this
use of the plur. neut. of the verbal adj. ; cf. c. 79 etc.
14. ἐγκλημάτων — cf. c. 67, 4. The Athenians saw their business was to answer the Corinthian's speech.
that See
Intr. p. xxxv.
16. δηλῶσαι && —if this were expressed as strictly parallel to the μέν clause, we should have δηλώσοντας δέ. 17. ἐν whéovi—of time, like ἐν μέσῳ, ἐν ὅσῳ etc.
24. προσελθόντες---ο the ephors; contrast παρελθόντες below. 26. εἴ τι μὴ
A rokeA óov—this is the reading of the Laurentian,
and its evidence in such a point outweighs all the other Mss. The confusion between the fors of indic. subj. and opt. is continually met with in Mss. ; this passage does not stand on the same footiug as vi. 21 where εἰ ξυστῶσιν is the only reading. PAGE 604.
l. ἀντιλογίαν
τοῖς —the
dat.
following
the
constn.
of
ἀντιλέγω, as in ἐπίπλους τῇ Πελοποννήσῳ etc. 7. οὔτε ἡμῶν οὔτε rovrav—prob. to be taken with ol λόγοι. The emphasis is on δικασταῖς : we are not in a court of law.
11. ToU ἐς ἡμᾶς ka8«rróros—'the ment that is used against us.' 16. ἀκοαὶ. . Adyww—‘ hearsay.’ 18. εἰ καὶ δι ὄχλον
general
line of argu-
μᾶλλον ἔσται αἰεὶ προβαλλομένοις --
‘even if it will prove an annoyance to you to have them continually brought before νοι. προβαλλομένοις, Sc. ὑμῖν, 15 personal
pass.
cf.
c.
126,
11;
140,
1;
the
act.
would
be
NOTES προβάλλομεν ταῦτα ὑμῖν.
213
(To supply ἡμῖν, as many edd. do,
produces a sense inconsistent with what follows, esp. τοῦ δὲ λόγον μὴ παντὸς στερισκώεθα. There is no need to read προβαλλόμενα with Classen ; and to place the comma after ἔσται,
as I formerly proposed to do, is no improvement. ) 21. éxuvSuvevero—impersonal. ‘It was to help the cause that we faced danger ’—ıt was not φιλονικία (νίκη) that prompted
us.
dw’ ὠφελίᾳ is intentionally vague, because the speaker is
to emphasise
the share that the Peloponnesians received ; cf.
c. 74, 3.
τοῦ lpyov—' the reality’ )( τοῦ λόγου
‘the mention
‘reference to it,’ when such reference is opportune for us, 24. μαρτυρίου --' evidence’ (not ' protest’). 25.
ὑμῖν with καταστήσεται.
27. προκινδυνεῦσαι brunt
of it,’
of
battle
προκινδυνεύω
iu
Tp
B. — ‘stand
forward,’
against, as ἃ πρόμαχος.
the
famous
oath
‘bear
Demosth.
in de
Cor. 8 208
brings
μὰ
the in
τοὺς
Μαραθῶνι προκινδυνεύσαντας κτλ. : he probably had this passage in mind. PAGE 65.
8. ἀδυνάτων ἂν ὄντων --- masc. —ot (sc. oi Πελοποννήσιοι from τὴν II.) ἀδύνατοι ἂν ἦσαν (Mr. Forbes takes ἀδυνάτων ὄντων as neut., like πλωιμωτέρων ὄντων c. 7, εἰσαγγελθέντων c. 116— where see notes—as if we had ἀδύνατον ἂν ὄν. This will not 0).
6. ὁ Greek ’).
$—sc. καὶ (‘as’) πρὶν ναυμαχῆσαι
(not ‘equal to the
8. dvexapnoev—cf. c. 118, 2. τοιούτον KTÀ. —cf. c. 71, 1.
9. δηλωθέντος --οἴ. c. 76, 2. ἐν ταῖς ναυσὶ. . tyévero—cf.
e.g. Soph.
0.7. 314 ἐν σοὶ
γάρ ἐσμεν.
13. £vveréraTov—again of Themistocles in c. 188; cf. vi. 39 φημὶ... βουλεῦσαι ἃν βέλτιστα τοὺς ξυνετούς. θεὸς δίδωσιν says Euripides.
14. ἐς τὰς Terpakxocías—'to
make
τὸ συνετὸν ὁ
up the total of 400.’
Herod. gives 378 as the total, Aeschylus (Pers. 339) 310; cf. Demosth. de Cor. 8 238 τριακοσίων οὐσῶν τῶν πασῶν, τὰς διακοσίας ἡ πόλις παρέσχετο. Herod. also puts the number rovided by Athens at 200. There is therefore an exaggeration here, (Some edd. read τριακοσίας.)
214
THUCYDIDES
I
15. τῶν δύο μοιρῶν.---ἰῃὴ fractions when the deuominator exceeds the numerator by 1, the larger number is omitted ; cf. c. 10.
16. αἰτιώτατος vaypaxfjiauı—instead of τοῦ v., as Antiphon v.
28 ἐγὼ
αἴτιος ἦν πεμφθῆναι
ἄγγελον.
When
the
Pelopon-
nesians in the fleet wanted to retreat to the Isthmus, Them. sent ἃ false message to Xerxes to the effect that now was his
chance to destroy the Greeks.
The king then attacked the
Greeks from the south. See on p. 121 ]. 23. 17. kal αὐτόν- διὰ roÜro — δι ὅ after ὅπερ : see c. 10, 3 (or avrol—see crit. note, ‘you yourselves admitted how great a service he had rendered"). Cf. Herod. viii. 124 of the visit of Them. to Sparta, μοῦνον δὴ τοῦτον πάντων ἀνθρώπων. Σπαρτιῆται προέπεμψαν.
18.
ἄ
μάλιστα.
€&.-—‘though ‘Them.
was
chariot at Sparta, and mounted Spartans.
. .'
τῶν.
presented with
was
an
.
ἐλθόντων
olive wreath
with and
a
escorted to the frontier by 300
20. οἵ ye—quippe qui.
22. SovAcvévrev—Greeks used δοῦλοι esp. of the subjects of the Great King.
24. μηδ᾽ Ss—e. 44, 2. PAGE 66. 2. robrov—sc. τοῦ Ud’ ὑμῶν ὠφελεῖσθαι. ..
οὐχ ἧσσον.
. F=
μᾶλλον 1j.
ὑμεῖς μὲν γάρ army under
3. ἀπό
-the ref. is to the tardy dispatch of the Spartan
Pausanias to Boeotia in 479 B.c.
τε olxovpdvwv—'‘ from
your cities
that were
un-
disturbed’)( ἀπὸ τῆς οὐκ οὔσης ἔτι (wédews): ἐπὶ τῷ τὸ λοιπὸν v., ‘with the object of occupying them in the future’ )( ὑπὲρ τῆς . . οὔσης, ‘which there was but little hope of recovering.' (Some following the Schol. see in πύλις a reference to the Athenian navy ; this is only artificial and does not give a clear antithesis to ἐπὶ τῷ νέμεσθαι.) 9. τὸ pépos—cf. c. 127, 2, like τὸ σὸν μέρος, τοὐμὸν μέρος in
tragedy. ‘Did our part in rescuing you as well as ourselves.’ The emphasis is on ὑμᾶς, and there is ἃ contrast with ὑπὲρ ὑμῶν καὶ οὐχ ἡμῶν τὸ πλέον of ]. 5.
11. ὥσπερ kal ἄλλοι-- ὥσπερ καὶ ἄλλοι δείσαντες προσ., others did.’
‘as
NOTES
215
13. &s— ‘regarding ourselves as.’ οὐδὲν ἂν Ba ἔτι - because it would have been of no use. 15. καθ᾽ fjmvx (ay —' without interference.’ 17. épa —- nonu. 18. yvauns—‘resolve,’ sc. τῆς τότε : the gen. is governed by ξυνέσεως.
19. ἀρχῆς depends on For the point see c. 96.
ἐπιφθόνως
διακεῖσθαι — φθονεῖσθαι.
23. παραμεῖναι πρὸς τὰ ὑπόλοιπα rod B.—' remain at your post to attack what was left of the power of the Persians.' See c. 95, 7 ; 96, 1; Herod.
vii. 107.
26. Ipyov—tlıe fact of accepting the ἡγεμονία. 27. ἐς τόδε--οἴ. c. 144, 4.
28. ὑπὸ Séovs—fear of the Persians. joyed
by Athens
when
ode as — interest,’
she
had
once
tipffs—the honour enaccepted the ἡγεμονία.
PAGE 67.
1. καὶ οὐκ ἀσφαλές takes up τὸ πρῶτον : when acquired this power it was necessary to guard it. 2. καί τινων κτλ. — κατεστραμμένοι ἦσαν.
καὶ
ἐπεί
τινες
καὶ
we had
ἀποστάντες
ἤδη
5. twéwrev—there seems to be no advantage in rendering ‘suspicious ' here in preference to * suspected.’ 6. πρὸς dpas—i.e. now that you were no longer friendly to us, our allies would have taken to revolting to you.
8. τῶν μεγίστων πέρι kx.—' when the greatest dangers are involved.’ εὖ τίθεσθαι---οἴ. c. 25, 1; ‘to manage well matters that are for their interest.’
9. ὑμεῖς yobv—an example of the principle just stated. 10. ἐπὶ,
. xatacrnodpevor—referring
to the oligarchies;
see c. 19.
12. &nyetoGe—governs τὰς πόλεις. +ére—in the Persian War.
13. ἀπήχθησθε — ‘liad
become
This is better than ἀπήχθεσθε,
unpopular’;
‘had been hated.’
cf. c. 75, 2.
216
THUCYDIDES
14. εὖ ἴσμεν
μή--μή
generaly
confident belief impressed on others. 15. λνπηρούς---' severe.’
I with
a
verb
expressing
18. ἀπὸ ToU — like ἀπὸ τοῦ πράγματος Demosth. 24, 6.
19. διδομένην— ' when it was offered.’ 21. τριῶν--οἴ, c. 74, 1, and so iii. 40. The conjecture is however scarcely certain, though elegant. See c. 75, 8.
24. καθεστῶτος---δὐϑ. like δηλωθέντος c. 74, 1 (not governed by uwdp£avres), ‘it being established by precedent.’
25. ἄξιοί re—the re joins the clause to what precedes, and does not belong to the καί following. 26. Soxotwres—imperf. μέχρι οὗ. . νῦν = - μέχρι νῦν ὅτε (Croiset): ‘when, while (really) thinking of expediency, you profess to argue from justice.’ Soin Bk. v. in the Melian dialogue τὸ ξυμφέρον is opposed to τὸ δίκαιον, and cf. the Corcyrean speech. ὁ δίκαιος (ἄδικος) λόγος — 'the argument froin justice (injustice)’; you
tell us what we ought
to do, but really think
of your own
interest. Pace 68.
1. waparvy óv —' when there was an opportunity’; to προθείς supply τῆς ἰσχύος. 2. τοῦ μή-- οἷ. c. 10, 1. 4. δικαιότεροι ἣ κατά- οἵ. c. 37, 8. 6. γένωνται after οἵτινες : if this is the true reading— see crit. note—we have an instance of the epic and Ionic usage.
See Goodwin
M.T.
8 540.
The only other ex. of pure subj.
with ὅς in Thuc. is iv. 17 ob μὲν thought to be from & gnomic poet. y ἂν οὖν — γοῦν ἄν.
τὰ 8. 11. a bad
βραχεῖς
ἀρκῶσι, which
19
ἡμέτερα λαβόντας -- εἰ ἔλαβον τὴν ἡμετέραν ἰσχύν. ἐκ τοῦ driekoüs—i.e. ἐκ τοῦ μετριάζειν. καὶ ἐλασσούμενοι yáp- an ex. to show how Athens got name as the result of her moderation. ‘For though in
suits arising out of contracts
against
our allies we
are at a
disadvantage and in our own city have instituted courts for these cases under equal laws (i.e. laws under which they and we are treated alike), we are considered litigious.’ ξνμβόλαιαι δ.
NOTES is probably from
217
ξυμβόλαιον, ἃ contract, and not from ξύμβολον,
ἃ treaty ; δίκαι ἀπὸ συμβόλων were suits arising out of international treaties; but (1) it is not clear that Athens had such σύμβολα with the ὑπήκοοι, and (2) it is most improbable that in all such suits an Athenian had to sue in the courts of the subject state. It isknown that δίκαι ἀπὸ συμβόλων were tried in the court of the defendant's state. If we assume that δίκαι ἐμπορικαί, commercial suits, which were tried in the state in which the contract was made, are referred to, the
passage becomes
clear. An Athenian litigant in the courts of the ὑπήκοοι is in an unfavourable position, whereas ὑπήκοοι in the courts at Athens are treated. exactly like Athenians. Some think that
ποιήσαντες τὰς κρίσεις refers to the compulsory jurisdiction at Athens in certain criminal cases, when a subject ally was
involved.
But even when
both parties were ὑπήκοοι such cases
were tried at Athens, whereas Thuc. is speaking only of cases in which one party was an Athenian: so supply ἐν ταῖς... δίκαις in the second clause. In these latter cases the allies considered that they were badly treated. ([Xen.] Ath. Pol. i. 16 τοὺς μὲν τοῦ δήμου σῴζουσι, τοὺς δ᾽ ἐναντίους ἀπολλύουσιν ἐν rois δικαστηρίοιξ.
On the difficulties surrounding the judicial arrangements of the Athenian League see Holm, Hist. of Greece ii. 217, Engl. Transl.)
13. dpolors—contrast with ἐλασσούμενοι. κρίσιν ποιεῖν= institute a trial. 18. διότι--- why.' The reason why others in our position do not go to law is that they use force.
Mr. Forbes points out
that the Persians, Scythians, and Carthaginians are instanced as ruling powers by Socrates in Xen. Mem. 1. i. 11. 19. of 86—' but they.’ 21. παρὰ Tb μὴ οἴεσθαι their opinion that it is wrong A γνώμῃ
A κτλ.
ναι---μή with x., 'contrary to that they should be deprived.
—'either by a decision (in our courts) or
through the power we enjoy on account of our Empire.'
This
refers not only to defeats of allies in the Athenian courts, but to curtailments of their rights (δυνάμει xTA.).
24. τοῦ
ἐνδεοῦς —'at their (slight) inferiority.’
after χαλεπῶς φέρειν as in ii. 62, 3 probably, μενοι is to be supplied. 25. ἀπὸ
πρώτης--οὗ. c.
15,
originally completed the phrase.
τὸν vönov— ‘law’ in general.
3.
Perhaps
The
gen.
unless
στερισκό-
ὁρμῆς
or ἀρχῆς
218
THUCYDIDES
I
Pace 69.
8, Bvatópevo.— pass. as often in Thuc. and trag. Tb μὲν «rrd.—‘ the one (τὸ ἀδικεῖσθαι) seems to be an act of over-reaching where both are equal, the other an act of
compulsion where one is stronger.'
The infins. are impersonal.
[cov and xpelacovos are neut. 8. εἰκότως belongs only to 7 δὲ ἡμετέρα κτλ., and is added as an afterthought, the general sense being: ‘It is inconsistent
that they
should
chafe at our empire
when
worse from the Persians, but it is not strange;
they
endured
for’ etc.
The
Persian power too was βαρύ, but they had to put up with that. 9. ¥ ἂν otv—c. 76, 4. 10. &p£avre—ingressive, ‘gain an empire.’
ll. «óvowwy—' good-will,’ which professed ‘liberators’ (ii. 9, 4).
at present they enjoyed as
ἡμέτερον---. 33, 3. 12. ola .. öpoia— “measures like those of which you gave some examples. δι’ ὀλίγου, ‘for a short time.’ For the conduct of the Spartans as leaders, esp. for the hatred excited by Pausanias, see cc. 94 f.
14. γνώσεσθε--- ‘are going to adopt.’ 15. ἄμεικτα. . τοῖς ἄλλοιε---ἰ.6. τοῖς τῶν ἄλλων v.
For
νόμιμα see c. T1, 5.
17 #wv— ‘when he goes abroad.” Xen. Lac. Pol. also speaks of the change for the worse in the Spartan when he left home to assume 8 command. οἷς with rvoultec— χρῆται, an Ionic use.
19. οὐ βραχέων ----᾿ no trifling matters.’ 22. πρόσθησθε--- ‘assume,’ ‘take upon 144, 1. 24. at last equally
4; Eur. φιλεῖ ἐς a series remote’
26. ἐν ἀδήλῳ
yourselves,’
cf. c.
Her. 146 ἴδια προσθέσθαι κακά. τύχας . . περιίστασθαι --΄ is wont to turn out of chances, from which we (you and we) are (i.e. we cannot see into them).
x.—' depends on what is hidden.’
The ordinary
phrase would be ἐν ἀδήλῳ ἐστί, and so we have a compression of ἐν á. ἐστὶ καὶ κινδυνεύεται. For this kind of expression cf. vii. 77 ἐν κινδύνῳ αἰωροῦμαι.
NOTES
219
28. τῶν Ipywy—without stopping to think: elsewhere, at the beginning of a war, ἔχονται is equivalent to ἅπτονται.
ἃ χρῆν
ὕστερον
ien
as Thuc. says are
impulsive.
δρᾶν — if & is right (and the Schol. as
well as all Mss. has it), we cannot render & ‘a thing whiclı,’ but must make τῶν ἔργων antecedent: nor is there any objection to this except that Thuc. regularly uses δρᾶν (αὐτό or αὐτά)
differently ; see c. δ, 2: but δρῶ rà ἔργα is good Greek, e.g. αυννοίᾳ θ᾽ ἅμα οἷον δέδρακεν ἔργον Eur. And. 806.
29. 45n—‘ only when,’ with κακοπαθοῦντες. PaGE 70.
2. ὄντες οὔτ᾽ atro(—strictly this should have been οὔτ᾽ αὐτοὶ ὄντες.
3. λέγομεν 0. —' we charge you.’ αὐθαίρετος---ἰ.6. not forced on us by circumstances. 6. AverOar—cf. c. 140, 2 rà ἐγκλήματα διαλύεσθαι.
ξννθήκην — in the thirty years' truce. 8. Épxovras—c. 49, 4.
ταύτῃ ἡ ἂν tdnyfiobe— ‘following just wherever you may lead.’
14. TrávTag—sc. τοὺς ξυμμάχους καὶ τοὺς ᾿Αθηναίους.
16. ἐπὶ τὸ αὐτὸ. . Ibepov— “led to the same conclusion.’ 17. éBucy—' were guilty.’ 24. ὁρῶ —sc. πολλῶν v. ἐμπείρους ὄντας. 25. τοῦ Ipyov— ‘the thing,’ i.e. war. 26. ol woAAol—in contrast with Archidamus and the elderly Spartans.
27.
vouicavTra— parallel to ἀπειρίᾳ. PAGE 71.
2. Πελοποννησίους καὶ τοὺς &.—i.e. our allies in Peloponnese and neighbours (who are not allies), esp. Argos. hendiadys here, but it is unnecessary.) 3. Tapópovog— ‘a match for’; cf. ἀντίπαλος.
5. ἐφ᾽ ἕκαστα
—we
(Some
can strike at any point promptly.
see ἃ
220
THUCYDIDES
I
9. ἵπποις καὶ ὅπλοις καὶ 6xÀe—the transl. ‘cavalry and hoplites and light-armed troops ’ is possible (cf. e.g. Xen. Anab. HII ii, 36); but the simple rendering (ὄχλῳ: population) borne out by rois ὅπλοις καὶ τῷ πλήθει, c. 81, 1.
is
12. φόρον (wore ets—contrast c. 19, 1. 13. 17.
T(v.— neut. lveo rac = μεταξὺ γενήσεται (Croiset).
ἀλλὰ τοῖς χ.-- ἀλλά in rhetorical altercation, as often (e.g. vi. 38, 5), ‘well then.’ 18. ἐν kowe-—-'the treasury."
The want of money at Sparta
previous to Lysander's conquests is well-known. After the Pel. War there was a great change; but the money then acquired found its way into private hands, not into the treasury.
19. éroluws—‘ensily.”
(The Spartans had not yet become
conspicuous for covetousness, as after the war.)
20. φέρομεν---848 an εἰσφορά. 21. τῷ
TÀffe«
the
king
confederate states. It is greater number of troops the Peloponnese. 22. Iruborrövres— ‘by method adopted, and this 26.
includes
the
population
of tho
true that Sparta could pour a far into Attica than Athens could into
repeated incursions.’ This was the is probably written after the event.
τίς — ποῖος.
PAGE 72.
1. κἀν τούτφῳ--- in that case. 9. xaÀóv—sc. ἡμῖν. In καταλύεσθαι the mid. ciprocity, as in σπένδεσθαι. 3. pa) oy—sc. 7) ἀναγκασθῆναι πολεμεῖν.
denotes
re-
7. otrws—adeo. 8. φρονήματι--“ pride,’ ‘high spirit.’ TH γῇ δουλεῦσαι .-- slaves to their land,’ so that they will not endure to see it ravaged, but will resist vigorously. Archidamus to the same effect in ii. 11. 6-8.
Cf.
11. οὐ μὴν οὐδέ-ο. 8, 3. ávavoOfyrec—with ἐᾶν ; a reply to the Corinthians ; see c. 69, 3.
NOTES 14. xarabopay—properly
22]
‘catch (a criminal) in the act’;
hence ‘detect,’ ‘discover.’
16.
δηλοῦντας
ἐπιτρέψομεν
with
πόλεμον
implying
a threat,
(for which cf. c. 71, 1) implying
and
ὡς
an admission;
properly ‘explaining’ ; cf. c. 129, 1.
17. τὰ ἡμέτερ᾽ atrav— ‘our own resources,’ both ξυμμάχων προσαγωγῇ and τῷ rà αὑτῶν ἅμα ἐκπορίζεσθαι. ‘The καί clause takes a new constn. after the long parenthesis. (Croiset thinks that rà ἡμέτερ᾽ αὐτῶν means ‘our home resources’ only, and that rà ἡμέτερ᾽ αὐτῶν ἐξαρτύεσθαι is answered by rà αὐτῶν (sic) ἅμα ἐκ. which refers to the resources of the ξύμμαχοι. But τε after ξυμμάχων is much against this; and why should τὰ ἡμέτερ' αὐτῶν be limited by ξυμμάχων προσαγωγῇ ?)
19. καὶ BapBápev—efforts by Sparta (and perhaps Athens) to obtain the support of Persia are already heard of in the early
part of the war. 22. &mıBovlevöuefa—by attraction to the dowep-clause. 24. τὰ αὑτῶν — rà ἡμέτερα αὐτῶν,
‘our own’
as distinct from
those of our ξύμμαχοι. This is awkward after rà ἡμέτερ᾽ abrwv above in a wider sense, and the use of αὑτών, otherwise common, for ἡμέτερ᾽ αὐτῶν does not occur elsewhere in Thuc. Hence
αὐτοῦ (adv.) and αὐτόθεν have been proposed.
26. ἐτῶν δύο καὶ Tpuéy —cf. δὶς καὶ τρίς, δύο kal τρία βήματα : καὶ (‘even ’) δὶς καὶ τρίς (see crit. note) etc. is also used. PAGE
1. ἤδη
with
what
follows:
73.
when
they
see that while
negotiating we are preparing quietly for war and maintaining a firm tone.
6. μὴ yàp ἄλλο τι --- Archidamus argues against invading Attica at once, that as long as it is unravaged it is ἃ hostage for the conciliatory behaviour of Athens
in the negotiations ;
when once it is wasted, they will know that they have nothing
to
lose.
7. ἔχειν (sc. ὑμᾶς), by un idiom common in Thuc. = εἶναι ὑμῖν.
οὐχ
Aawov— ‘the more so.’
The cultivation of tlie poor soil
of Attica was necessarily carried on with great care.
12. ὁρᾶτε confederacy
ὅπως
pf—the
(τῇ IleXowovv5sq).
result may There
be trouble is much
for
difference
the of
opinion about the transl. : Classen says, * see that it do not turn out for us as regards Pel. in a more disgraceful and difficult
222
THUCYDIDES
I
fashion'; Krüger and others, ‘see that we may not bring about a more disgraceful and difficult state of things for Pel.'—making πράξομεν trans. and αἴσχιον καὶ d. adjj. : so Steup, but he renders,
‘see that we
do
not
do
(something)
too disgraceful
and
awkward for Pel.’ Some think that 4 τῇ ᾿Αττικῇ is to be supplied to the comparatives, others—but wrongly—# viv. I construe ‘see that we do not fare in a manner more humiliating and difficult for the confederacy,' sc. than if we refrain
from invading Attica now,
These
ἐγκλήματα
take up the cudgels and
ἀπορία
to the
by negotiation. difficulties.
spurred on by these accusations.
against Athens, it may
be said, if we do not
(see next sentence), may involve αἰσχύνη confederacy ; but
they can
be disposed
of
To go to war at once may involve us in worse
16. UB(ev—'separate,' or ‘individual,’ thinking of Corinth and Megara. 18.
ebmperös—contrasted with αἰσχρῶς kal ἀπόρως πράξομεν.
θέσθαι---οἷ, c. 25, 1. 22. χρήματα d4povres— ‘and they contribute money.’ Lac. allies paid no tribute.
The
23. ὅπλων --- 18. a matter of,’ ‘calls for.’ Krüger compares e.g. Demosth. de Cor. 8 190 ἦν ἐκεῖνος ὁ καιρὸς τοῦ γε φροντί-
ζοντος ἀνδρός.
The gen. is one of description.
24. ὠφελεῖ---δῖὸ of avail. The dat. with ὠφελεῖ is not very rare in poetry (see Jebb on Soph. Ant. 560), but ἠπειρώ-
ταις here belongs to ἔστι as much as to δι᾿ ἥν, etc., “especially
in the case of a land power fighting against ἃ naval power.’ Different explanations have been put forward of the meaning: some suppose Archidamus to allude to the necessity of obtaining a fleet (see c. 81, 4), others think that the allusion is to the equipment of large armies to remain in the field ; but this is against the general argument of the speech. In θαλασσίους is included the idea of tribute-paying subjects: the Lac. have
no fleet and no subject allies bound to pay for one.
succinct
restatement
of cc. 81, 4, 82, 1.
(This is 8
Archidamus
rightly
sees that success in ἃ war with Athens depends on getting control of the sea. You cannot conquer & sea power on land, cf. c. 121, esp. 4 and 5, and c. 81, 1, 2. The two things needful to give success to the Pel. are δαπάνη and μελετή.)
28. τῶν ἀποβαινόντων depends on τῆς αἰτίας, ‘the greater share of responsibility for the consequences.’ ἐπ᾿ ἀμφότερα —i.e. for good or ill (xal εὐκλείας καὶ δυσκλείας says the Schol. on ii. 11 δόξαν οἰσόμενοι ἐπ᾽ áudórepa).
NOTES PAGE
l. τι
αὐτῶν
—i.e.
τῶν
293
74.
ἀποβαινόντων,
‘let
thought of them beforehand.’
us
take
some
τὸ βραδὺ καὶ μέλλον —referred to in τοῦτο and αὐτό below; μέλλον is only another name for βραδύ.
2. ἡμῶν depends on 7. 4. παύσαισθε --- ‘reach the end.’
we shall
not
be properly
prepared,
If we begin ina hurry,
and
the
war
will
prolonged.
5. καὶ
äua— the meaning
is ‘we have always been
free
and famous, so our βραδύτης has served us well.’ This leads naturally to the reflexion that the so-called Spadurns is really σωφροσύνη.
7. δύναται. find
. εἶναι — when
εἶναι : δύναται
μάλιστα
δύναται ΞΞ ‘means’ we do not
εἶναι ΞΞ literally
‘can
be
on
the
whole,’ i.e. ‘may be called.’ τοῦτ᾽ is emphatic, ‘it is just this that.’ ἔμφρων too is emphatic ; hence its position ; and the etymological jingle σω-φροσ-ύνη ἔμ-φρων is equivalent to ‘true prudence.'
For
σωφροσύνη
cf. c. 68,
1, to which
this is a
retort.
10. τῶν.
. iforpvvóvrev
depends
as objective
gen. on
ἡδονῇ. There must be here à side ref. to the increasing influence of oratory in the Athenian ecclesia—éra:vos, ἡδονή (produced by rhetoric), κατηγορία all show it. The whole of
tliis paragraph is an independent criticism of Athens as well as an answer to the contrast drawn by the Corinthians. ξὺν ἐπαίνῳ — ξύν of the means is very rare (cf. 8 3 and c. 141 ξὺν φόβῳ), but occurs sometimes in Xen., as well as in poetry. 11. ἐπὶ τὰ S«vá —cf. c. 70, 2.
13. ξὺν κατηγορίᾳ
—like the Corinthian speech.
14. ἀνεπείσθημεν — for the aorist cf. c. 70, 7. 15. τὸ pév—i.e. because we
πολεμικοί.
have a keen sense
The meaning is ‘we are brave of honour, and
sense of honour because we are moderate.’
in the opposite direction, and
moderation
and
the
'The
chief element
(σωφροσύνη substituted for τὸ εὔκοσμον)
main
ingredient
aidws) is bravery.’
μετέχει.
says,
we have a keen
But Thuc. proceeds
in the
sense of honour
in
is honour,
(αἰσχύνη=
Cf. iii. 88 τὸ εὔηθες, οὗ τὸ γενναῖον πλεῖστον
224
THUCYDIDES
I
17. ἀμαθέστερον. . wacbevdéuevoi—causal partic., ‘not so highly as to despise the laws’; see c. 68, 1, but a different turn 1s given to ἀμαθία here in the retort. 18. καὶ EW x. —sc. παιδευόμενοι, which is again to be supplied to the following infinitives. 20. τὰ ἀχρεῖα. thinking on public policy for one's self, for instance, and thought of.
putting
before
the
assembly
what
you
have
22, &vopoles—not so well as the fine criticism would lead one to expect.
ἐπεξιέναι ---86. αὐτοῖς, i.e. rois 28. παραπλησίονε---8ἃ8 good 24. τὰς προσπιπτούσας. . befall cannot be determined by is ‘just as we do not despise
πολεμίοις (Stahl). as ours. Siacperds—‘the chances that argument.' The general sense
the intelligence of our enemy,
we know that we canuot see into —but must depend on our εὐψυχία διαιρεῖν is properly ‘to make a gap 26. παρασκεναζόμεθα ---366 crit. καὶ...
δεῖ the subjunc.
so
the future—how war will go and σωφροσύνη in preparing.' in.' note: αἰεί favours the indic.,
But an exhortation here would come
in very awkwardly before c. 85, where the peroration begins; and Steup, reading παρασκευαζώμεθα, thinks this whole section (8 4) properly follows c. 85 § 1.
PAcE
4. ἐν
τοῖς
75.
ávaykavorárow — ‘in
the
most
rigorous dis-
cipline ' ; cf. ξὺν χαλεπότητι παιδευόμενοι above. (The rendering of Bonitz, *trained (only) in what is indispensable,' as distinct from the useless wisdom of the Athenians seems to take us far
beyond anything that Archidamus has said on the small extent
of Spartan education, and a limitation—' only '—does not fit in well with the context.)
12. BovAeirapey—* come to a decision.’ 18. διὰ Lexóv—i.e. we need be in no hurry, because the Athenians, knowing looking what they
our streugth and that we are not overhave done (cf. c. 69, 3), will not dare to
take any further step against us in the meantime. 18. wp6repov—before you too consent to arbitration. 20. kpárwrra—this (Classen).
and
φοβερώτατα
are
pred.
If Thuc. means xal τοῖς ἐν. φοβερώτατα
to
ταῦτα
to explain
NOTES κράτιστα, the first καί must be omitted double καί makes two ideas. PAGE
225 (see crit. note).
"The
76.
2. ka(rov—' yet surely,’ a common use. 6.
καὶ τότε
kal νῦν---ἦμεν is implied after τότε.
The same
form of sentence occurs in iii. 40, 2 and vi. 60, 2.
But in
Plat. Gorg. p. 488 B we have ἀλλὰ τοῦτα ἔλεγον καὶ τότε kal νῦν λέγω (ἔλεγον del. Schanz).
11. wapaderéa—for the plur. see c. 72, 2. 12. οὐδὲ δίκαις κτλ. --- nor must we decide by arbitration and words where we are ourselves being
injured not in word.'
μή is caused by the prohibition of which the whole
clause
consists.
24. ἔφορος óv—' in his capacity as ephor.’ 25. ἐς τὴν d. —after ἐπεψήφιζεν. 26. «plvovor.—decide in the assembly. Pack
77.
3. ὅτῳ μέν — the method of taking the division seems to be introduced for this special occasion.
adopted
8. tyévowro—‘ amounted to.’ 12. ψῆφον drayayetv—‘ put the vote to them.’ 13. κοινῇ BovrAcvedpevor—‘arrive at a common decision before . .' 18. τοῦ τὰς σπονδὰς A.—the gen. of definition. Some edd. think these words spurious,
ero . . προκεχωρηκνιῶν
— lit. ' took Place in the fourteenth
year of the thirty years’ truce when it had lasted (so long, sc. és τοσοῦτον), i.e. in the fourteenth year of its course.
21. τὰ Εὐβοϊκά860 c. 23, 4 and 114. PAGE
78.
1. of yap—now begins the so-called πεντηκονταετία, or sketch of the growth of Athenian power in the half century between the battle of Mycale (479 B.c.) and the beginning of the war (431 n.c.). This sketch continues to c. 118, 2; and
226
THUCYDIDES
it consists of two parts:
I
(1) to c. 96—how
they obtained the
leadership (#yexovia)—or, as he says here, ἦλθον ἐπὶ rà πράγματα
ἐν οἷς ηὐξήθησαν ; (2) to c. 118—how the leadership was transformed into an empire—é» οἵῳ τρόπῳ κατέστη (ἡ ἀρχή), c. 97, 2. 4. vavo{—Salamis (480). wel@—Plataea (479).
7. διεφθάρησαν — by Leotychides, the Spartan king, and Xanthippus, father of Pericles. 11. ol... Eippaxoı— probably there was no formal treaty, but ξύμμαχοι is used Pecause they were fighting side by side with the Athenians. (There is no need to remove ξύμμαχοι with Wilamowitz.)
14. ényapédécavres—the winter of 479-478 B.c.
The history
of Herodotus ends with the fall of Sestos. 19.
«0606s —iu autumn of 479.
ὅθεν — ἐκεῖθεν ol. Cf. Soph. Trach. 701 ἐκ δὲ γῆς ὅθεν | προύκειτ᾽, ἀναζέουσι, ‘from the earth where it was strewn, for Srov. ‘The omission of antecedent before ὅθεν is not very. rare ; e.g. ii. 94 τροπαῖον ἔστησαν ὅθεν ἀναγαγόμενοι ἐκράτησαν, for ἐνταῦθα ὅθεν. The places are Salamis, Troezen and Aegina.
21. κατασκενήν .---' stock, goods,’ of all kinds.
22. dvoucoSopetv—in the autumn of 479. 24. Bpaxéa—‘ only 8 small remnant,’ of the wall round the city left by the Persians. PAGE
79.
l. ἦλθον πρεσβείᾳ — ἐπρεσβεύσαντο, the sociative dat. as in naval and military expressions ; but there is no other example
of this phrase and hence the variant readings. τὰ μὲν rk. Partly because' etc. μήτε not οὔτε because apprehension is implied.
5. τὸ πλῆθος ὅ---866 c. 14, 2. 6. γενομένην —for the order see c. 11, 3. 8. ee rfke—sc. τείχη. 9. τὸ 86,
1.
βονλόμενον ἐς τοὺς ’A.
before the assembly.
(= τὴν βούλησιν) certainly
belongs
καὶ
ὕποπτον — see
to δηλοῦντες
and
For δηλοῦν in this use cf. c. 82, 1.
c.
means
11. és δὲ τοῦ B.—‘ but on the ground that,’ still depending on ἠξίουν.
NOTES
297
13. ἀπὸ ἐχνροῦ ποθεν. . dppacbar:—‘to use any stronghold as a base of operations.’
ποθεν by attraction for που.
νῦν —'lately.' Herod. ix. 13 fol. tells us how the Persian general Mardonius made Thebes his headquarters. 15. ávaxépno(v τε καὶ ἀφορμήν .-- 88 a place to retreat to or advance irom,' abstract for concrete.
24. ἱκανὸν
Apwow—for the pred. adj. cf. ii. 75 ἤρετο rà
ὕψος τοῦ τείχους μέγα. The aor. (see crit. note) is necessary: the pres. would mean 'so long as.' 25. ávaykavoráTov—cf. c. 2, 2. TüávTas—on this the Schol. notes αὐτοὺς xal γυναῖκας xal παῖδας. [t is therefore evident that he did not find these words in the text. Mr. Forbes defends the words as ‘ forcible,’ and adds that the note may only mean that the words xai . . παῖδας in the text themselves explain πώντας. Steup finds something wrong with their ‘force,’ rightly saying that xal
οἰκέτας
is missing
after
παῖδας : e.g.
Diodorus xi. 40 says
συνελαμβάνοντο τῶν ἔργων οἵ τε παῖδες xal al γυναῖκες xal καθόλον πᾶς tévos καὶ δοῦλος : but the details of his account
are not drawn wholly from Thuc.
The second point raised in
defence is not borne out by the scholia to Thuc.
26. τοὺς ἐν τῇ wéda—cf.
c. 64, 2: in contrast with those
away from Attica. PAGE
3. τᾶλλα.
. τἀκεῖ — ‘the
80.
rest, namely
what was to be
done there’: an intentionally vague and mysterious suggestion
of cunning, both being object of πράξοι. emphasis on both.
The
order
throws
The Athenians liked such oracular remarks
from those whom they regarded as ξυνετοί : this style reflected the manner of the Delphic oracle, the gnomic poets, the sages
and early philosophers.
6. &ápxás— ' magistrates.’ 1l. es—for ὅπως,
18. διὰ φιλίαν
‘how’ (not ‘ that’).
αὐτοῦ --- αὐτοῦ objective: the reason of this
favour was, no doubt, that Them. was regarded at Sparta as a
protector from the Persians: they owed
him gratitude for the
Athenian fleet ; cf. c. 74, 1.
τῶν
δὲ
stautival;
ἄλλων
κτλ. — Classen
makes
and renders καὶ σαφῶς ‘quite
ἀφικνουμένων
positively’ (ἐπεὶ
sub-
οἱ
228
THUCYDIDES
I
ἄλλοι ἀφικνούμενοι, ‘visitors — ‘arrivals,’ as they say—xal σαφῶς κατηγόρουν). The contrast to this subject will then be σφῶν αὐτῶν ἄνδρας below. Others render *(all) the other (visitors) arriving and announcing.’ In either case there is probably un allusion
to τῶν
ξυμμάχων
ἐξοτρυνόντων
c. 90,
1 in rà» δὲ
ἄλλων : these ‘others’ were persons afraid of Athens. 15. τειχίζεται---5ι, τὸ τεῖχος. 18. οἵτινες χρηστοί — parts οἵ εἰμέ are often short rel. sentences.
omitted
in
21. $jkov—' were come.’ 29. &restäin—inıpersonal. Pace
81.
1. τοῖς Λακεδαιμονίοις--ἰ.6.
ταῖς ἀρχαῖς (c. 90, 5).
4. εἰ δέ τι κτλ. — a claim
to complete recognition as an
equal.
rı=*in
regard
to any
ınatter:’ ws πρὸς κτλ,
lit. ‘to
ro in future as to men who could discern both their own interests and the common interests of the Greeks.' ἰέναι depends on εἶπεν in sense of ἐκέλευσεν : ὡς πρὸς δ. is placed early so as to make it eınphatic, and the emphasis must be inarked in translating. There is no reason for interfering with the text here: προδ- (see crit. note) is only a slip for πρὸς 9.
10. ($acav—sc. the Athenian ambassadors. 11. BovAcbeoOar—the
attraction of the verb of short rel.
sentences in O.O. into infinitive is less rare in Gk. than in Lat. :
Thuc.
ἀλᾶσθαι.
has several examples,
e.g. ii. 102
λέγεται.
. ὅτε δὴ
This sentence stands as accus. of respect to οὐδενὸς
KTÀ.
14. καὶ ἰδίᾳ xTÀ. —'and for the Athenians themselves and with a view to (tlie interests of) the allies in general it would
be beneficial. The position of the allies would be secure in the general oouncil if Athens was strong. (This passage has been much discussed : (1) Classen takes τοῖς πολίταις with és τοὺς x. ξυμμάχους also, and understands, ‘ would he of more advantage
to the Athenians
relations with the advantage
(both) separately and with regard to their
the allies. But it is rightly objected that of the fortification cannot be limited to the
Athenians, who want to prove that it is good for the allies too
(cf. c. 91, 4 τὰ κοινά). Steup deletes ἄμεινον εἶναι, and is thus able to transl. the xai ἰδίᾳ κτλ. * both for the A. themselves aud
NOTES for the allies.’ as it stands.
229
But there is no decisive objection to the text It is true that we expect ἰδίᾳ re or καί (‘both’)
ἰδίᾳ ; cf. τά re σφίσιν αὐτοῖς.
. καὶ τὰ κοινά : but the omission
and the unusual ἐς τούς instead of dative serve to make allusion to ‘the allies’ a climax; xal= ‘and in fact.’)
the
15. ὠφελιμώτερον ἔσεσθαι---[Π 9 argument is that this, like the earlier actions of Athens, was done er’ ὠφελίᾳ, not only for Athens but for the Greek allies in general. Cf. c. 73, 2.
οὐ vyáp—this alludes to all the allies quite as much as to Athens: they would feel that the right to strengthen themselves was vindicated by Athens, thus all would be on an equal footing in the common council and their views would te equally respected.
18. &$n—Themistocles. 22. γνώμης Tapawéce« —sc. ἐπί, ‘to recommend a resolution to the Athenian assembly,’ ie. to give advice. τῷ κοινῷ depends on χαραινέσει. δῆθεν is of course ironical. 25. τὰ páAwrra—best taken with ἐν τῷ τότε, ‘at that time more than at any other.' PAGE
4. ol yàp θεμέλιοι
82.
the upper part of the wall was of brick
(πλίνθοι), but there was a lower course of stone. Cf. Demosth. de Cor. 8 299 οὐ λίθοις ἐτείχισα τὴν πόλιν οὐδὲ πλίνθοις ἐγώ.
δ. ξυνειργασμένων ---᾿ shaped for fitting together.’ 6. στῆλαι
walls of
— fragments
of some
of these belonging
Themistocles have been found.
8. tavraxy—the of the city.
extension
to the
Hicks, Afan. p. 13.
did not include
the SW.
side
For μείζων cf. c. 90, 8.
10. κινοῦντες ἠπείγοντο---' disturbed in their haste’: κινεῖν is specially used of things that should not be interfered with.
12. ὑπῆρκτο δ᾽ αὐτοῦ---‘a beginning had been made on it’; αὐτοῦ is neut. = ‘the work.’
13. ἐπὶ τῆς. . Apfe— ‘during his office of archon, which he had held for a year at Athens.’ It is not necessary to understand by κατ᾽ ἐνιαυτόν ‘annually,’ which complicates the grammar of the sentence. κατά, with words denoting time,
230
THUCYDIDES
is not always distributive.
The year is now thought to be
482 B.c. 15.
Ausévas—Piraeus,
I
Zea, Munychia.
16. καὶ abroßs— ‘and that the A., having once become a naval people, were in a very advantageous position for the acquisition of power.' (Classen understands προφέρειν as fut. in sense.)
18. τῆς yàp Sf—as often, there is an ellipse here; in full the sense is ‘he naturally thought of this, for,’ etc. 19. τὴν ἀρχὴν εὐθὺς ἐξνγκατεσκεύαζεν--- δῇ once began to help them to lay the foundation of their empire.’ This seems, on the whole, better than the version preferred by Classen and others, ‘prepared to begin (ἀρχήν) the building,’ in which ξυν- is left obscure, and is, in fact, variously explained ; and ἀρχήν (cf. c. 96, 2) is strange for ἔργον. The allusion is to
the whole period after Salamis.
21. νῦν Err—generally supposed to have been written after the destruction of the walls of Piraeus by Lysander in 404 s.c. There is, however, no certainty in the matter ; cf. 8 2.
22. δύο in two rows
&pafa.—this is supposed to mean that wagons drawing
sed one another
up stones from on the wall
because the idea of Classen
opposite
(Classen);
ends met and
or, much
better—
could not possibly be carried out
in building—the wagons worked from one end up an incline, and after discharging their load turned and passed the laden wagons still coming along the wall. (So It is almost incredible, however, that intended this Greek to represent (1) {wo ing along the wall, and (3) the one ut I have no other explanation to offer.
already Procopius.) Thuc. should have rows of wagons (2) set returning empty. Some suppose that
two wagons worked on the level and deposited stones ready for the building ou cither side; perhaps this does prove τὸ πάχος
τοῦ τείχους.
24. ἐντὸς δέ---ἰ.ὁ. the inside was not filled with clay and small stones, but large blocks were cut and fitted and fastened
together on the outside by iron clamps.
25. ἐντομῇ--- by cutting into them,’ so that the ends could fit together and overlap.
This is much
which cannot= ‘at the ends.’ 98.
οὗ Suvo«tro—-i.e.
better than
ἐκείνου ὃ διενοεῖτο τελεῖν.
ἐν τομῇ,
NOTES Pace
231
83.
1. émflovAás—an ἐπιβουλή would lead to an ἐπιβολή: Thuc. as often gives to the cause the meaning of its effect : there is no
need to alter the text, despite the gloss in the Schol. 2. ἀχρειοτάτων---ἰῃ its strict military sense.
16. ξννέπλεον — it is not clear whether this expedition took
place in 478 B.c. or in the early spring of 477.
The Athenian
eaders were Aristides and Cimon.
21.
ἐν τῇδε
τῇ
n.—during
the command
of Pausanias.
ἡγεμονία refers to his leadership, not to the Spartan ‘hegemony’ ; see e.g. c. 128, 7. The story of Pausanias is given in cc. 128--
130.
Some, to improve the sense, connect these words with
the sentence that follows ; see crit. note. 24. καὶ ὅσοι kxTÀ.—see c. 89, 2; those who had from Persia after Mycale.
revolted
27. ylyverfaı—the pres., if correct, implies that the change could not be made in a minute. κατὰ τὸ Evyyevés—they were not a// Ionians, but the greater number of them were. PacE
84.
9. ébalverq—it is not necessary to supply a subject such as ἡ ἀρχή: the lit. rendering is *an imitation of despotism was apparent (was to be seen)” ; so in ii. 65, 9 ἐγίγνετο λόγῳ μὲν δημοκρατία, ἔργῳ δὲ . . ἀρχή, ‘nominally a democracy was
being formed.’ 10.
kaA«ic0a.— before the court at Sparta.
14. τῶν μὲν ἰδίᾳ. . ηὐθύνθη -- was punished for the injuries he had privately inflicted on any person.’ iva is prob. masc., the sing. being used for the plur. as elsewhere, c.g. c. 40, 5; πρός τινα, ‘in certain respects,’ seems flat, and τινα as neut. plur. is avoided where it is ambiguous.
15. rà δὲ péyrora—those against the state: internal accus. to ἀδικεῖν. 17.
i8éxe.—sc. τοῦτο.
23. οἱ ἐξιόντες--ορ.
c. 77, 6; the pres. of the succession
of commanders.
xe(povs-— ' corrupted.’ 27. ἐπιτηδείους = HlAovs.
232
THUCYDIDES PAGE
I
85.
2. trafav—cf. Ath. Pol. c. 28 τοὺς φόρους οὗτος (Aristides) ἣν
ὁ τάξας
ταῖς
πόλεσιν
τοὺς
πρώτους
fra
τρίτῳ
μετὰ
τὴν
ἐν
Σαλαμῖνι vavyaylayv—in 478-77. Trans. ‘assessed the contributious both of the states that were to provide money and of those,’ etc. —not ‘fixed which of the states,’ which overlooks the technical use of τάσσειν, ‘rate.’
5. ὧν -- ἐκείνων &, gen. of cause. 6. ‘EAAnvoraplar
. .
ἀρχή -- ἀρχή is
and the verb is attracted’ x could
hold
the office.
its number.
pred.,
‘as an office,’
Only Athenians
They were ten in number,
elected annually in the Ecclesia,
and were
one from each tribe.
See
9. ὁ πρῶτος φόρος rayxGe(s—for the order cf. c. 11, 3.
The
Sandys’ note on Ath. Pol. c. 80, 2. sum
is thought,
on
the evidince
of the extant lists of the
quota of th paid to Athena, to be impossibly large; and Classen therefore considered the whole passage interpolated. Perhaps the sum given was assessed, but not realised. 11. Afftos—the treasury of the league was removed to Athens in 454 B.c. 14. BovAevévrav—co-ordinate with αὐτονόμων. ἀπό expresses the method.
τοσάδε to be Schol.
ἐπῆλθον -- tlie series of enterprises that are about
noticed
(c.
98-118);
τοσάδε
διεπράξαντο
ὅσα.
. ἐρεῖ
15. διαχειρίσει πραγμάτων---ὉΥ the management (manipulation) of political affairs.’ 16. μεταξὺ τοῦδε τοῦ πολέμον καὶ τοῦ M.—‘between the Persian and Peloponnesian wars.’ Greek often proceeds in this manner from the nearer to the more remote. &—the antecedent is τοσάδε. ἐγένετο stands as the passive of ποιῶ.
20. τοὺς ale προστυγχάνοντας ἐν éx&áere—' who in the several incidents came in contact with them’ as enemies (‘took
part
with
the
allies’
as some
understand
προστυγ.
does not seem to be supported by the usage of the word ; it occurs only here in Thue}. 21. atrad—i.e. ἃ ἐγένετο κτλ.
28. x eploy—' period.’
NOTES
233
26. 'EXXávucos—this is the only instance in which Thuc. names another historian. H. of Mitylene was contemporary with Pericles, and in his ᾿Ατθίς (here called ᾿Αττικὴ ξνγγραφὴ) he included a sketch of historical events, and is said to have carried his work down at least to 406 B.c.
27. βραχέως τε καὶ τοῖς χρόνοις οὐκ &.— Hellanicus must have been very scanty and inexact in the dates for this period, since this description would apply in a considerable degree to the better account that Thuc. proceeds to give. For the probable dates of the events to be noticed see Introd. p. xxix. 29. Éxe«—sc. ταῦτα. PAGE
86.
1. 'Hióva—this place became later the port of Amphipolis. Miltiades is the victor of Marathon. 6. ᾧκισαν atro(—Scyros was parcelled out among Athenian settlers, or ‘cleruchs’; sessores veteres eiecit (Cimon), agros civibus divisit, says Nepos.
7. ἄνευ τῶν & Εἰ βοέων --- Carystus sided with Persia, but the rest of Euboea was in the league. 8. EvvéBnoav—the Carystians. 12. τὸ καθεστηκός---ποῖ ‘recognised principles of right,’ but the existing arrangement' which was that the allies retained their autonomy.
18. guvéBy—sc.
δουλεία as in c. 8, 3.
δουλωθῆναι, ἐδουλώθησαν.
plies ἐδουλώθη, and acting
The
Schol. sup-
on this hint Krüger removes ξυνέβη,
so that ὡς ἑκάστη (nom.)=‘severally.”
This gives a simpler
constn., but the text may be sound; and, as Classen says, ξυνέβη
points to the ‘varying circumstances under which the loss of
αὑτονομία occ
16. λιποστράτιον.---ἰ.6.
failure
to
furnish
any
ships
as
distinct from ἔκδειαι, which means that part only of the number
was supplied. 17. ἀκριβῶς ἔπρασσον---᾿ were exacting’ in regard to φόρων
ἔκδειαι, not quite “exacted (the tribute).'
18. λυπηροὶ fjcav—cf. c. 76, 1: ταλαιπωρεῖν refers to νεῶν ἔκδειαι καὶ λιποστράτιον.
20. τὰς ἀνάγκας. ‘their coercive measures.’
Cf. Aesch. P.V.
1052 ἀνάγκης στερραῖς δίναις, and see L. & S. 8.v. ἀνάγκη 3.
234
THUCYDIDES
I
22. äpxovres— ‘as rulers’ they were not popular as they had been at first. wes implies the omission of the details. 24. éy—i.e. ὅτι οὔτε ξυνεστράτευον κτλ, 27. ciprocal
para ἐτάξαντο. . $épev—the mid. denotes a rearrangement. χρήματα 1s prob. object of φέρειν and τὸ
lk. ἀνάλωμα, ‘ the sum that fell to them ' is in appos. to it. PAGE
87.
1. nögero— Thuc. never uses the ordinary Attic form αὐξάνω. 10. ἀμφότερα. — cf. c. 13, 5. 12. d$ow(xev—the Persian fleet consisted almost wholly of Phoenician ships. τὰς wacas—'‘in all.’
15.
ävrımipas— often used of the coast opposite an island, or
vice versa.
16. ἃ dvinovro—see notes on p. 2, 11 and p. 44, 3. Here the two antecedents in different number require d, which would otherwise be ὧν. 23. αὐτοὶ éxparnoav—in contrast with the 'Hówrol—but the use of αὐτοί here, to which Steup objected, is strange. Notice how the precise sense of οἱ ᾿Αθηναῖοι shifts in this passage with the different verbs (e.g. πέμψαντες and διεφθάρησα»).
26. ὑπὸ τῶν Θρᾳκῶν ξυμπάντων ols—all the Thracians who
objected, as distinct from the Edonians only.
οἷς πολέμιον ἦν
replaces a ró»- partic. limiting ξυμπάντων. Poppos con). ξύμπαντες, supported by Valla's transl omnes, brings this passage more into harmony with Herod. ix. 75 and other passages in which the Edonians alone are named as destroying the A. Butif Thuc. meant the Edonians only, why should he say ὑπὸ τῶν Θρᾳκῶν ?
27. τὸ χωρίον κτιζόμενον --΄ the founding of the place.’ PAGE 8. αὐτοῖς — ethic:
88.
it is constantly
placed
early
in
this
manner. wepro(xwy—the free, but dependent Lacedaemonians descended from the pre-Dorian inhabitants and living in separate towns. 11.
rére—‘ the descendants
had been enslaved in
of the
M. of former
times who
the war made up most of the helots.'
NOTES
235
πλεῖστοι is pred. ; τότε refers to ἃ well-known occasion, as else-
where in Thuc. (often too, to some event that has been already recorded by Thuc.)—here to the first Messenian war, alter which the Messenians became, as Tyrtaeus says, ὥσπερ ὄνοι
μεγάλοις ἄχθεσι τειρόμενοι : δουλωθέντων is epithet,
the order
being justified by παλαιῶν, cf. c. 11, 3 κατεσχηκότος.
12.
ἐκλήθησαν
—'came
to be called’; cf. c. 2, 4.
ol πάντες,
sc. Εἵλωτες.
16. xaOeAdvres—this and the following aor. are called
partic. are what
‘timeless,’ i.e. they denote merely the act, not time
anterior to the verb.
"This happens only when the leading verb
is in aorist. Cf. the constn. with ἔτυχον ἔλαθον, ἔφθασα. 17. χρήματά τε κτλ. —the order is ταξάμενοι αὐτίκα ἀποδοῦναι x. ὅσα ἔδει καὶ τὸ λοιπὸν φέρειν (x. ὅσα ἔδει), and x. ὅσα ἔδει is the common object and so is put first. Note the aor. of one act
and the pres. of ἃ system. (It is certainly wrong to make ἀποδοῦναι depend only on ἔδει and to render καί ‘also.’ This would mean that they were always indemnity now exacted).
to
pay as much
as the
28. Evppdxovs—in virtue of the alliance under Sparta still formally existing in spite of the Athenian hegemony. 24. οἱ δ᾽ #AGov—there was opposition at Athens to the proposal, but Cimon's view was that Sparta on land was as
necessary to
Greece as Athens
on
sea:
Greece was
while Sparta was tied down (Plut. Cim. 16).
‘lamed’
27. τοῖς 8é—edd. are divided as to whether this refers to the Athenians who fell short of their reputation, or to the Lac., i.e. whether to transl. (1) ‘but in their case (the Ath.) it gradually appeared that there was a deficiency in this (viz. τοῦ τειχομαχεῖν δυνατοὺς
εἶναι), as they
(2) ‘whereas
did not
succeed in taking
it was apparent to
them
Ithome ; or
(the Lac.)
that they
Jacked skill in this’—so that the full form would be ὅτι (ol μὲν ᾿Αθηναῖοι) . . rots δὲ (Λακεδαιμονίοις). This seems better. The
reading τῆς of the Schol. is prob. only a conjecture.
ἐνδεᾶ is
again the plur. adj. for sing. (-Ξ ἔνδεια). "Thuc. might have said τοῦτο ἐνδεὲς ἐφαίνετο in the same sense. PaaeE
2. βίᾳ
yap—
τειχομαχεῖν)
‘for
otherwise
they would
have
89.
(had captured
they
been
it by
competent
assault'—and
would not have had to turn the siege into a blockade.
on c. 11,
1.
Cf.
286
THUCYDIDES
8.
ἡ
reflected
v—'considering';
I
so often in the aor. : they
ὅτι οἱ μὲν Δωριεῖς, oi δὲ Ἴωνες (Schol.).
f) τι krÀ. — this depends on δείσαντες, the clause between being parenthetical; a not very common form of constn. ; cf. Soph. Antig. 1278 τὰ 8’ ἐν δόμοις | ἔοικας ἥκειν καὶ τάχ᾽ ὄψεσθαι κακά, with Jebb's note.
9. vewreplowor—i.e.
by joining the helots
This would be
an instance of their τολμηρὸν xal νεωτεροποιία.
12. ἐπὶ re βελτίονι XA ‘for the better reason,’ viz. that they were no longer needed. Of course βελτίων implies a contrast with a suppressed κακίων αἰτία viz. τὸ ὑποψίαν τινὰ γενέσθαι. 15. δεινὸν
ποιησάμενοι--δ. ἡγησάμενοι:
ποιεῖν — to declare ἃ thing intolerable.
but
δεινόν
(-ά)
28. δεκάτῳ tra—this year (see chron. table p. xxx) would be 456 B.c. ; but there are several reasons for thinking δεκάτῳ wrong: e.g. (1) we know from (Xen.] Ath. Pol. that the
Messenians occurred in sent a large δεκάτῳ the
were reduced 457 B.C., nor army out of chronological
before the battle of Tanagra, which is it possible that Sparta should have the Pel. unless this were so; (2) with order of events is here only in this
Sketch of the rise of Athens interrupted to notice an event that
occurred
after events
that are
still to be noticed.
Hence
Krüger proposed τετάρτῳ, supposing that Thuc. wrote A which was taken for the initial letter of δεκάτῳ instead of the sign for four. Unfortunately, in view of the fact that Cimon was not
sent to Sparta until after the capitulation of Thasos, and that then ἐμηκύνετο ὁ πόλεμος, it is enough.
doubtful if four
years is long
28. elva.—the infin. in 0.0. for ἔστω δοῦλος of O.R.
This
infin. is particularly common in the terms of treaties. PacE
90.
3. 'Iéoufrra— Doric ending, recalling the original. 5. κατ᾽ ἔχθος Hön—closely together, — κατά (‘in consequence of ') τὸ ἤδη γεγενημένον €.
ἐς Ναύπακτον — the settlement proved most important to Athens in the Pel. War; they were expelled from Naupactus by Sparta at the end of it, and lived dispersed until Epaminondas befriended them in 370 B.c. 12. lexov—ingressive. The possession of Megara and its
NOTES
237
rts was of the utmost value to Athens, because they thus locked the roads from Pel. to Attica and Boeotia. 90. twép—‘ above,’ i.e. further inland. 22. 'Apratiptov—the successor of Xerxes. PAGE
91.
4. 'AAvás— nom. ᾿Αλιῆς or -eis (cf. Δωριεύς) The object of Athens was to begin a plan of connecting up the coast from the Saronic G. to the G. of Argos.
19. πρότερον with ἐπικούρους. 21. xar aov —the heights command the Megarid.
28. ἐκ τῆς w.—c. 8, 2. 29. of τε πρεσβύτατοι καὶ οἱ v.—those over fifty or under twenty did not as ἃ rule serve outside Attica: here περίπολοι (18-20) and ol ὑπὲρ πεντήκοντα ἔτη γεγονότες, as Classen points out, are meant Pace
92.
3. abrol—subj. of ἔλασσον ἔχειν. 6. κακιζόμενοι-- ψεγόμενοι (Schol.).
8. ἡμέραις — with ἐλθόντες
ἀνθίστασαν.
The dat. is much
better than accus. taken with παρασκευασάμενοι. 15. προσβιασθέν---' driven to it,’ viz. πρὸς τὸ ὑποχωρεῖν (to take οὐκ ὀλίγον as adverbial and qualifying προσβιασθέν with Steup is very forced). Others explain πρὸς τὸ ἐσπεσεῖν kTÀ., which
on
account
of
διαμαρτὸν
ἐσβάλλω) is less likely. 16. à ἔτυχεν---80. by. 19. elpyov—sc. αὐτούς.
τῆς ὁδοῦ ἐσέπεσεν
(— pass
of
τοῖς ὁ. is dat. of means.
22. τὸ πλῆθος---΄ the main body.’ 25. τὰ μακρὰ relxn—these are not the two
parallel ‘Lon
Walls’ or ‘Long Legs' so familiar, but (1) the northern or τὸ ἔξωθεν τεῖχος running to Piraeus, and (2) the wall to Phalerum, τὸ Φαληρικὸν τεῖχος. The third wall, parallel to the northern wall, and called τὸ διὰ μέσου or τὸ νότιον τεῖχος was
added some years later. are here meant, the two Ileparad.
(Steup supposes that all three walls to Piraeus being included in τὸ és
This is contrary to Andoc. de pace 37 and Plat. Gorg.
238
THUCYDIDES
I
p. 455 x, and in ii. 13, 7 it is not likely that Thuc. means both walls by τὸ μακρόν, esp. as immediately afterwards he uses
the plur.) 28. Aupmäs—i.e. the territory of the Dorians.
The names
of the towns in this district are variously given
by different
authors ; but no doubt the three places here mentioned are the most important. PAGE
98.
3. Νικομήδονς — brother of Pausanias. The have crossed the Corinthian (* Crisaean ') gulf. 9. &veyxépovy—' began to. .' 15. δύσοδοε---ἰ. 6. the passes are difficult.
Lac.
must
20. τὸ δέ τι-- τὸ δέ is ‘on the other hand’ (cf. τὰ μὲν. δέ), and τι ‘in some measure ’ (cf. οὔ τι in Plato).
. τὰ
22. érfyyov—‘ were egging them on.’ 25. πανδημεί---ἰ.6. all liable to serve who remained at Athens. 28. vouícavres δὲ xTÀ.-—rouicarres and ὑποψίᾳ are the emphatic words (Forbes). PaGE
8.
94.
φόνος. . πολύς — see Hicks, Man.
Gk. Hist. Inscr.
p.
28. imon, who had been banished after the return from Ithome (c. 102), was recalled after this defeat on the motion of
Pericles. Plato (Menez.) and Demosth. speak of the battle of Tanagra as indecisive. Plato also misrepresents the ostracism of Cimon in the Gorgias.
11. διὰ Tepavelas—a good proof of the severity of the defeat is that the Athenians did not attempt to hold the passes against the returning Lac.
14. Mvpov(Bov—cf. c. 105, 4. 26. τὸ veópvoy —Gythium. This Chalcis is in Aetolia. PAGE 98. 1. ἐν ἀποβάσει τῆς γῆς --ἐς τὴν γῆν ἀποβάντες. 5. ἰδέαι--- * vicissitudes,’ διάφοροι πόλεμοι, οἷον ἧτται (Schol. ).
. . νῖκαι καὶ
NOTES 19.
239
ἄλλωε--- μάτην (Schol.).
19. II
Ta—a&n
island formed by one of the mouths
of the Nile and a canal. 24. ἤπειρον. --86. ἐποίησε. 27. woAeuhravra—there is no need to read πολεμησάντων with Cobet ; cf. such expressions as νοσεῖ τὰ πράγματα: edd.
quote
Herod.
vii. 9 és
τοῦτο
θράσεος
Pace
96.
ἀνήκει
rà
Ἑλλήνων
πράγματα.
3. ἐν τοῖς erv—the D
Nile Delta.
δ. καὶ &ua—the constn. changes from subord. to principal form : strictly we require xal ἅμα ὅτι κτλ. 7. τὰ πάντα ἔπραξε--ἰ.6. τὴν ἀπόστασιν ἐποίησε τῆς Αἰγύπτου (Schol.); see c. 104, 1.
11. Μενδήσιον képas—one of the Nile mouths named after a town Mendes. κέρας καλεῖ Νείλου τὸ στόμα (Schol.). 12. εἰδότες —after τριήρεις, of the crews, as often;
104, 1.
20. βασιλέως---θ belonged prob. to the Scopadae,
two branches of the royal house of Thessaly.
e.g. vi.
one of the
φεύγων ---΄ living in exile.’ 25. 6ca —8c. κρατεῖν ἐδύναντο. See Jebb on Soph. 0.7. 347. 26. ἐκ τῶν ὅπλων .--ἰ.6. outside the camp. τὰ ὅπλα is properly the space
in front of a camp
commonly in Xen.
where the arms were piled : so
Pıor
97.
δ. Πρφικλέονε-first mention of him (year 454 ».C.). 9. τῆς ' Axapvavías depends on Οἰνιάδας. 15. tcxov—‘ abstained from war with Greeks.’ 18. dw αὐτῶν---ουἅ of the 200. 19. μεταπέμποντος-- Thuc. often uses this verb in act., while other authors use the mid. : so too μεταχειρίζω, πειρῶ. 22. Klrvov—in Cyprus (now Chitti)
28. ὑπὲρ Z. —' off S.,’ with ἐναυμάχησαν.
240
THUCYDIDES
I
25. ἀμφότερα --866 c. 18, 5. 26. αἱ.
Egypt.’
. πάλιν [ai]
Adotwaı— ‘which had returned from
aliis to be omitted.
Pace
98.
δ. tyyevopdvov—cf. c. 80, 4. 6. Lid él par the battle of Oenophyta, the democratic Party in Boeotia had driven out the anti-Athenian oligarchs. ut tle exiles had recovered some of their lost power.
13. καὶ áyBpasoB(cavres—there is no sufficient
ground for
omitting these words (see crit. note): that a scribe copied them from c. 98 is very unlikely. It is remarkable that
Athens should have taken such drastic measures place in the heart of Greece and so near.
against
a
14. καταστήσαντες-56. ἐν αὐτῇ, unless éy- should be read (if Thuc. wrote in the old Attic alphabet, éy would be nearly identical with the last two letters of φυλακήν) ; cf. c. 115, 3.
15. Kopeve(g—in
this
engagement
Clineas,
father
of
Alcibiades, was killed ; and Tolmides himself.
17. yvepns—i.e. sympathised with the oligarchs. 22. ol &AXor—the
other
Boeotians,
as
well as
those who
had been driven out.
26. Siaßeßnxöros—the gen. abs. in place of dat., throwing emphasis on the partic. ; cf. vi. 10 σφαλέντων δὲ (ἡμῶν) . . ταχεῖαν τὴν ἐπιχείρησιν ἡμῖν ol ἐχθροὶ ποιήσονται : gen. for nom. viii. 16, 4 ; for accus. ii. 8, 4. PAGE
9. Θριῶζε--ἐς
τὸ
Θριάσιον
99.
πεδίον
(cf. ii. 19);
Thria
near
Eleusis. 11. τὸ mAdov—‘ further.” Pleistoanax was banished from Sparta on his return, being thought to have taken a bribe to leave Attica (ii. 21).
15. ὁμολογίᾳ κατε convention.
See Hicks
avro—arranged their affairs under a Man. p. 33.
20. é&ToBóvTes—for the aor. cf. c. 101, 1.
28. τὴν trol wrelay —this is the only case in which νεωτερίξζω has an accus. except a neut. pron. (ri, οὐδέν etc.).
NOTES PAGE
241
100.
5. Aftyvov—Athenian colony. 6. τῶν δὲ Zap(ov—for the constn. cf. c. 72, 1.
8. τοῖς Svvarwrdrots— ‘the leading oligarchs’ in Samos. ξυμμαχίαν seems to be used somewhat loosely as applied to τοῖς δυνατωτάτοις.
10. εἶχε Zäpdeıs—as satrap of Lydia. 18. τῶν πλείστων .-' most of them' : the sense is not clear.
16. ot ἦσαν παρὰ odl(oiw—this seeıns to refer to Athenian
ἐπίσκοποι who were sent out to superintend the affairs of tlie new democratic government of Samos.
18. παρεσκενάζοντο στρατεύειν-- “μετ᾽ αὐτοῦ (i.e. Pissuthnes) says the Schol.; and CG (see crit. note).
this note has strayed
into the text of
21. ταῖς μὲν éx. —for the article cf. c. 10, 2. 24.
τῶν
Φοινισσῶν
vedv—i.e.
the
Persian
fleet
that
Pissuthncs might be expected to employ. αἱ 8’ ἐπὶ X(ov—Sophocles the poet was στρατηγός of this squadron. See Jebb's Intr. to the Antigone. 25. περιαγγέλλονσαι Bondeiv—calling for the contingents
they were entitled to. be depended upon.
Chios and Lesbos were not entirely to
PacE 101. 6. xparotvres—‘ being superior.’ τρισὶ τείχεσι — intended to blockade three sides that did not face the sea. separate walls is not explained.
10. ἐσαγγελθέντων.---οἵ. plur. c. 7, 1.
δηλωθέντος
the
Why
c.
town
on
the
they built three
74,
1, and
for the
ἐπ᾽ atrote—i.e. τοὺς ᾿Αθηναίους.
14.
ἀφάρκτῳ -ἰ.6. the Athenians had neglected to protect
their naval station with a σταύρωμα. 21. πάλιν ταῖς νανσί with κατεκλήσθησαν.
28. Θουκυδίδου --ἰἴ is not known who this Thuc. is, probably not the well-known politician, nor the historian.
For
Phormio
see c. 64: after winning great victories he died about 428 B.c.
249
THUCYDIDES
I
Hagnon led the colony to Amphipolis in 437 B.c., and was again Strategus in 430 and 429 8.0. After the Sicilian disaster when an old man he was one of the ten πρόβουλοι.
27. ävrioxav—the advantage of this pres. form over the aor. of ἀντέχω (see crit. note) is that continuation of resistance
is implied.
PAGE
102.
1. καθελόντει —for the aor. see c. 101, 3.
3. κατὰ xpóvovs—at fixed intervals. 9. πρόφασιε---866 c. 28, 6. ll. ὅσα ἔπραξαν ol "EXAnves — in similarity to c. 97, 1, Thuc. between cc. 89 and 118.
here
spite
of the verbal
includes everything
related
12. ἐν ἔτοσι πεντήκοντα —i.e. between 480 and 431 B.c. Perhaps it is in order to round off the period to fifty years exactly that Thuc. here says μεταξὺ τῆς Ξέρξον ἀναχωρήσεωι whereas at c. 89 he began ἐπειδὴ Μῆδοι dvexwpnoay—which is ἃ different event.
14. dv ols—since the period begun at c. 97. In such a summary as Thuc. here gives we need not look for absolute
accuracy in the details: he is giving the useful landmarks in
the chronology. think of the
Think of the retreat of Xerxes, he says, and
beginning
of the war, you have just fifty
years,
and a convenient plan for remembering how the power of Sparta among the allies was lost and that of Athens was gained. 16. atro(—Athens, independently of her empire. 18. ἐπὶ Bpax 6—* to a small extent,’ cc. 90; 107; 112 ; 114. 19. ὄντες μὲν πρὸ τοῦ μὴ raxeis—the μή is unusual:
‘it is
as if he had said ὡς εἰκὸς μὲν ἣν καὶ πρὸ τοῦ μὴ ταχεῖς ὄντας᾽ (Croiset), i.e. Thuc. wants to represent a general cause: persons who had been slow before would naturally be slack in such a case: this connexion of cause and effect is well brought out by the μή. Cf. next note but one. (Goodwin, M.T. 8 685 offers
a curious explanation.) 21.
τὸ δέ rı—see c. 107, 4.
πολέμοις οἰκείοις —the use of the plur. where only the Messenian War is meant shows that Thuc. is still representing the cause as ἃ general one that would naturally have the effect mentioned.
NOTES 22. πρὶν
δή,
“until
at
length,’
243 with
past
indic.
often
introduces the decisive event.
23. τῆς Evppaxlas—esp. the Corinthians. 26.
xaSatperéa—fom. PAGE
108.
1. avrotg—as distinct (rom their allies : see c. 87, 6.
5. ἄμεινον fora:—formula used in inquiring of oracles, and ἅμεινον often in the metrical replies. 7. avrés—the oracle said ξυλλήψομαι αὐτός.
8. αὖθις with παρακαλέσαντες only; this is the con referred to in c. 87, 4. The earlier meeting implied is that of c. 67, 3.
18. παρόντες δὲ καὶ rére—as
they had already expressed
their views to the allies as well as to Sparta, their
presence at
this second meeting is specially mentioned. (There is no sufficient ground for rejecting παρόντες. Steup conjectures παροξύνοντες.) 19. τελενταῖοι bred Odvres—cf. c. 67, 5.
21. οὐκ...
&ri—the charges (1) that the Lac. were neglect-
ing their allies in not deciding to fight Athens, and (2) that
they had not brought the allies together to vote on a clear issue, viz. on the question of war, had been brought by the Corinthians in the earlier assembly (c. 68).
23. ἐς robro=és τὸ ψηφίσασθαι τὸν πόλεμον. 24. γάρ implies ‘otherwise we should blame them.’ 25. τὰ ἴδια ἐξ ἴσον vénovras—‘ while attending to their own interests as much as others do.' τὰ ἴδια is the interests of Sparta in contrast with rà xowá, the common interests of the confederates.. ἐξ ἴσου -- with as much care as others of the confederates (esp. the Corinthians) attend to their own interests. νέμω is here not ‘assign,’ but ‘direct, manage,’ as often in trag.:
how distinct the two senses are may be seen from Soph. 0.C.
237-240 γῆς | τῆσδ᾽ ἧς ἐγὼ κράτη τε καὶ θρόνους νέμω | μήτ᾽ ἐσδέχεσθαι μήτε προσφωνεῖν τινα |. . . μήτε χερνιβὸς νέμειν. Here νέμοντας
τὰ ἴδια has reference to αὐτοὶ ἐψηφισμένοι τὸν πόλεμόν
εἰσι, and προσκοπεῖν τὰ κοινὰ to ἡμᾶς ἐς τοῦτο ξυνήγαγον.
26. προσκοπεῖν--ποί
to foresee,
but
others,’ in a higher degree, in contrast corresponding to the προ- in προτιμῶνται.
‘to consider with
ἐξ
ἴσου
before and
244
THUCYDIDES
iy dAAow — the Schol. edd.,
‘in other
I
takes this as neut., and so many
respects’ or ‘on other occasions’:
but some
prefer the masc., and this is better ; ‘among others,’ i.e. when
the Lac. send representatives to a meeting in any allied city.
27. ἐκ ávrev—' above which is less likely).
all’ (masc. ; some render
28. ἐἰνηλλάγησαν.-- only
here
in this sense,
ὡμίλησαν (Schol). Cities on the coast who mercial dealings with Athens are meant. PAGE
‘by all,’
συνέμιξαν have
had
xai com-
104
2. xarexnyévovs —Thuc., like Herod., uses this verb in mid. as well as in act. : but only the perf. and plup. in mid. For the accus. Krüger quotes Herod. iv. 8 κατοικημένον τὴν . . νῆσον. ἐν vópe—'in the track’ of trade: this constn. is strange alter τὴν μεσόγειαν and prob. τήν is ıneant to extend over μὴ ἐν πόρῳ (sc. γῆ»).
4. τὴν xaraxopiSfv—i.e.
for exportation ; πάλιν qualifies
ἀντίληψιν ; of. e.g. ἡ πάλιν κατάβασις goes with both nouns. 8. ποτε with προελθεῖν.
vii. 44.
τήν of course
11. βουλεύεσθαι depends on χρή. 13. ἀνδρῶν yàp σωφρόνων ---ἰῃ sense subord.
to ἀγαθῶν δὲ
κτλ.
ἐστιν, εἰ μὴ ἀδικοῖντο- -ἰπδίαποος of this idiom in Sophocles are given bv Bayfield on Antig. 666 ; Goodwin M. T. 8 555; Spratt on Thuc. iii. 9. This opt. is esp. suited to such γνῶμαι because it puts the case in the most general way possible. Jebb on Soph. Antig. l.c. ἀλλ᾽ ὃν πόλις στήσειε, τοῦδε χρὴ κλύειν.
14. ἀδικουμένους -- εἰ ἀδικοῖντο.
The speaker impresses on
the allies of the interior that they too are involved when those of the coast are wronged. The change of case (ἀδικουμένων
might have been written) makes the partic. more emphatic. 15. εὖ δὲ wapacydév—this clause added to ἀνδρῶν ἀγαθῶν
rather than to σωφρόνων shows that the ἀνδρεία meant is not
opposed to the σωφροσύνη. 16. καὶ μήτε. . ἐπαίρεσθαι--[8 clause of ἐκ πολέμου πάλιν £. and μήτε.
gives the negative
. ἀδικεῖσθαι that of ἀδικουμένους
. πολεμεῖν in eniastic form. Thuc. is fond of restating in a negative a point just made ; while his style is brief, there is yet a tendency to redundancy. See Intr. p. xlvii. τῷ ἡσύχῳ τῆς
NOTES
245
Beh is according to the constant habit of substituting the adj. neut. for subst. in giving the quality of a person or thing. The
form
ἡσύχιος (see crit.
note) is rarer,
and as τὸ fjevxor
occurs in vi. 18 and 34, not to be preferred. ἡδόμενον is in the sing. as if τινα had preceded. 19. ókvéy—sc. πολεμεῖν. Some regard εἰ ἡσυχάζοι as a gloss, but if it is tautological after ὀκνῶν so is δι᾿ ὅπερ ὀκνεῖ after διὰ τὴν ἡδονήν.
29.
πλεονάζων ---ἐπαιρόμενος (Croiset).
ἐντεθύμηται.. Fraupdpevos—the constn. as with oióa. the θράσος is ἄπιστον is explained in what follows.
Why
23. yvec9évra—' planned.’ 24. τυχόντα —'luckily finding the enemy more ill-advised’ have been brought to a successful issue. It is difficult to choose between τυχόντα and τυχόντων, ‘chanced to be,’ agreeing with ἐναντίων, but in such a matter the authority of CG is to be preferred (the Schol. read τυχόντα) : for the same reason & is best omitted after πλείω.
26. ἐνθυμεῖται γὰρ
xrA.—lit.
‘no man
by his confidence
forms plans in the same spirit (ὁμοία — ὁμοίως) as he carries them out,’ i.e. a man may be confident when he makes a plan: it
does not follow that he does not carry it out in the same spirit. Reiske's ὁμοίᾳ,
‘with the same degree of confidence,’ makes the
construction easier, but is not certainly necessary.
ἔργῳ goes
so closely with ἐπεξέρχεται that τῇ πίστει just before in 8 different relation to its verb is not felt to be awkward. The security
with
which
the
notion
is formed
apprehension, and so ‘we are found wanting.”
gives
place
to
Hence rà καλῶς
βουλευθέντα miscarry. PAGE
105.
8. ἡμεῖς 56 — the application of the general statements in c. 120, 3.
5. ἀμννώμεθα —aorist (fut.-perf.). 6. καταθησόμεθα. ---οἵ. τίθεσθαι c. 82, 6. 7. κατὰ πολλά --΄ ΟἹ many grounds.’ 9. ὁμοίως Távras —'all with equal readiness carrying out the orders out that
given,' i.e. in the field, as usual; and the edd. point the allusion
is to the
κόσμος
for which
the
Dorians
246
THUCYDIDES
were
famous.
Cf. v. 66.
«ἰέναι és rà
I παραγγελλόμενα
again in iii. 55 in the sense ‘to answer to a call.’
occurs
For ἰέναι
ἐς of eager action cf. c. 1.
12. i£aprveópe)a —the reading of C is clearly right: there is no place here for the hortative subj. τῶν. . χρημάτων —the treasure in the temples. These could only be treated as a loan.
15. &vovs—adj., those from the subject allies. 17. μείζονι,
ov
ἂν τοῦτο
πάθοι---ἰ.6.
τὸ ὑπολαμβάνεσθαι
μισθῷ
becanse our men are not paid—it is the service of men,
not money, that gives us our strength.
Tois χρήμασι corresponds
to ὠνητή.
19. vavpaylas—defining gen. ; ἁλίσκονται of course is pres. for fut., ‘they
are lost.’
event to the
(Some
see here a reference after the
battle of Aegospotami and the capture of Athens ;
but the re shows that thesentence is a conclusion from what
precedes ; and Aegospotami was not the result of the cause
there stated.)
εἰ δ’ ἀντίσχοιεν —'supposing they should hold out,' i.e. if they are not defeated at sea after all (meaning ‘suppose we are defeated instead ') we shall get the better of them in the end.
24. 8 δ᾽ ἐ. ἐπ
Ὦ προύχουσι---ἴὯ0 advantage
have in point of ena
that they
ὅ h accus, of measure, and the dat. as
usual gives the point of excellence (8 is not accus. of respect;
and as to Antig. 208
τιμὴν
προέξουσ᾽ see Jebb's note).
For the
superiority of φύσις over διδαχή see c. 189, 2.
25. nadaperöv— ‘we can annul’:
καθαιρετέον would mean
“πὸ must,' which does not give a good antithesis yévaro. | Again C alone has the correct form.
to οὐκ ἂν
26. is abrá— viz. és τὸ μελετᾶν τὰ ναυτικὰ ἕως ἂν és τὸ ἴσον καταστησώμεθα.
27. 4— otherwise.’ al οὐκ. . ἀπεροῦσιν. . οὐκ ἄρα Sawa «v—in a bimembered sentence of this kind, οὐ is regularly used in the second clause if the verb
is in indic., μή if the verb
is in opt.
The first clause is logically subordinate to the second. Andoc.
i.
ἀπωλόμην.
102
οὐκ
ob»
δεινόν,
εἰ ὑπὸ
. ἐν ὑμῖν δὲ κρινόμενος.
μὲν
τούτων
Cf.
διὰ τοῦτ᾽ ἂν
. οὐ σωθήσομαι ;
NOTES PAGE
9. äpa—'we
247
106.
then decide not,’ i.e. infer that this is the way
to attain our objects.
4. abra—this and αὐτοῖς τούτοις refer to χρήματα. 6. ξυμμάχων Te ἀπόστασις kTÀ. —'such as revolt of allies, which means in the main them their strength, and country.’ The first ‘way 424 B.C. : the second was
withdra'val of the revenues that give erection of a hostile fortress in their of war’ was followed by Brasidas in not used until 413 B.c. (Decelea), but
the Athenians had then long feared such an attempt. The context makes it clear that ἀπόστασις implies the bringing about
of revoit.
11. ἐπὶ $wrois—'in accordance with fixed conditions’; cf. c. 18, 1: the meaning is explained in the following words. 13. ἐν à κτλ. —'and in this case,’ i.e. ‘and this being so, he who enters on war in a calm spirit is safer, whereas he who loses control of himself over it gets more falls.’ The meaning is * opportunities arise in war and have to be seized as they arise : it 18 not well for us to get excited now in thinking out plans of
campaign—such cut and dried schemes generally miscarry—but what we must do is to enter on war calmly and take oppor-
tunities as they occur.’ ὀργή means ‘ excitement,’ not anger here ; cf. ii. 11, 7 : οὐκ éAácow euphemism for πλείω, i.e. probably j ὁ εὐοργήτω:ς προσομιλήσας.
17. éxámrou—each state. πρὸς Ayrımd\ous— ‘with an enemy
equal to us’ (and not
stronger).
18. oleróv—'the position would be easy,’ i.e. there would be no need for us to combine. 20. κατὰ πόλιν —(Tpós nuäs) xarà πόλιν, lit. ‘as compared with us separately city by city.’ For ἔτι we expect πολύ, ‘far
more powerful, since we want a strong contrast after ἱκανοὶ πρὸς ξύμπαντας. ἔτι must be regarded as a meiosis. (Conradt and Steup have proposed considerable changes, but the text appears to be sound.) 21. καὶ á6póo.— ‘not only as a confederacy, but every tribe and every single town.’ 25.
ἄντικρυς
BovA«(ay—'downright
slavery ';
cf.
ἡ ἄντικρυς ἐλευθερία ; the adv. qualifies noun though the art., as in vii. 81 οὐ ξυσταδὸν μάχαις ἐχρῶντο.
viii.
64
without
248
THUCYDIDES
I
26. ὃ καὶ xvÀ. —'the very mention of which as a possibility is disgraceful’ (Wilkins).
dis τὸ δουλεύειν.
27. καὶ πόλεις kTÀ.—some edd. make this a second subject to
ἐνδοιασθῆναι
(Krüger,
Classen,
Croiset)
which
gives
an
excellent sense: but the constn. is simpler if αἰσχρόν is made pred. to this—‘and that so many cities should be maltreated yone.' Whichever be right, the ref. must be to the misery of
political slavery imposed
by Athens; and cannot, in view of
the next sentence, and of ἠλευθέρωσαν, p. 107 1. 2 )( δουλείαν,
apply to the present treatment of the contederacy. 28. ἐν w— ‘in κακοπαθοῖμεν.
that
case’;
PAGE
cf.
8 1;=el
πόλεις
τοσαίδε...
107.
2. ἡμεῖς E—this is in contrast with οἵ Ξε οἱ μὲν γὰρ (πατέρες).
αὐτό means τὴν ἐλενθερίαν implied in ἠλευθέρωσαν. ἡμῖν αὐτοῖς of course means for the Peloponnesians : and this clause implies “much less do we give freedom to all Greece’: hence there is no difficulty in supplying ἐν τῇ Ἑλλάδι to ἐγκαθεστάναι. 3. τύραννον δὲ. . καταλύειν—' we allow a despotic state to establish itself in Greece; and yet we make a point of putting down despots in any single city.’ τοὺς ἐν μιᾷ, sc. πόλει (which possibly has dropped out of the text), μονάρχους is opposed to τύραννον πόλιν ἐν 'EAAdÓt.
The traditional policy of
Sparta is alluded to. b. ἴσμεν —8c.. ἡμεῖς (of the speaker).
The
subject is not
identical with that of ἀξιοῦμεν (the confederacy). 6. τάδε. . ἀπήλλακται---" this policy is (=can possibly be)
free from '—viz. the policy of allowing an Athens to flourish.
As it is not free hence there is no 8. οὐ yàp δὴ suppose that you
from all three, it is exposed to at least one : need for ἑνός after ξυμφορῶν : see p. 31 l. 5. πεφευγότες αὐτά —the rendering ‘we cannot have avoided these evils only to’ etc. (Classen,
Croiset, Forbes, etc.), meaning by irony ‘we suspect that you have,’ cannot be right, since the previous sentence distinctly says, ‘ you have not escaped all three of these £vudopal.' Hence we must transl. (with Kriiger, Bohme, Steup): ‘For it is not
the case that you are free from these errors in assuming that
contempt which has πλείστους),
and which
proved ruinous to so many (δή strengthens from
its tendency to trip men
up, has
received instead (sc. from prudent men) the opposite name of folly.” Nothing is gained by preserving the jingle in καταῴρόγησις and ἀφροσύνη, because (1) to a Greek writer such a jingle
NOTES has some pointless;
rhetorical (2) though
merit;
249
in English it is detestable and
ἀφροσύνη
is spoken
of as
the
opposite
(ἐναντίον) of καταφρόνησις, it is really only different, but early Greek thinkers on the meaning of terms often confuse the
contrary with the contradictory.
τὸ ἐναντίον ὄνομα is internal
accus. to μετωνόμασται.
13. τοῖς v6v—neut., and so μελλόντων and παροῦσι. 14. περί = ὑπέρ, with ἐπιταλαιπωρεῖν, le. προσθεῖναι πύνον (Schol.).
τὸν
16. ἐκ τῶν πόνων τὰς äperds— famous characteristic of the Dorians. Cf. Hesiod, W. and D. 289 (Plat. Rep. p. 364p, Xen. Mem. 11. i. 20) τῆς ἀρετῆς ἱδρῶτα θεοὶ προπάροιθεν ἔθηκαν, quoted by several edd.: in the Funeral Speech Pericles speaks of the ἐπίπονος ἄσκησις of the Spartans. 18. ἐξουσίᾳ ---δυνάμει.
προφέρετε-- προέχετε, only used in this way by Herod., Thuc., and poets. . 21. κατὰ πολλά —three grounds for confidence are presently
given.
22. abrod—see c. 118, 3.
24. τὰ μὲν φόβῳ KTÀ.—' those who are not yet enslaved by the Athenians
fear to be 80 (φόβῳ) ; those who are so already
hope to regain their liberty (ὠφελίᾳ),᾿ Croiset.
ὠφελίᾳ, dat. of
motive, is, as Mr. Forbes says, here used for the idea (desire) of the thing rather than for the thing itself; he compares ἀρετή c. 88 and τιμή c. 75; and so elsewhere. 25. σπονδάς---ο. 53, 2. Pace
108.
2. κοινῇ-- in the common interest.’ 3. εἴπερ βεβαιότατον κτὶὰ.---' inasmuch as the surest ground (for taking common action) is that both cities and individuals have the same interests.’ This is the only natural way of taking the words, for the order does not allow καὶ πόλεσι xal I. to go with βεβαιότατον, as Classen supposed (Stahl and others
alter the text to make this constn. possible)
The meaning
is explained by οὖσι Δωριεῦσι κτλ. : it is the interest of every city and every individual member of the confederacy that Dorians should be protected from Ionians. (The Mss. have ταῦτα
for ταὐτά,
and
this
is transl.
‘since it is most certain
that this course—to go to war—is to the interest of,’ etc.)
260
THUCYDIDES
I
7. οὗ πρότερον ἦν T.—in former times Dorians were recognised as superior in wur to Ioniaus. In such a rhetorical statement we need not look for any specific historical reference. 9. ὡς οὐκέτι ἐνδέχεται κτλ. — ‘for it is now out of the question that we should wait (for common action by the confederacy), and that some of us (e.g. we Corinthians) should
now be suffering and others . . should shortly have the same
experience. Cf. vii. 49 νομίσας οὐδὲ παθεῖν ὅπερ ὁ Νικίας ἔπαθεν.
οὐχ
οἷόν
re εἶναι
διατρίβειν
16. αὐτοῦ--τοῦ πολέμου.
17. διὰ πλείονοε---οἵ time, in contrast with αὐτίκα.
ἐκ πολέμον μὲν κτλ. —the sentence becomes clear when τοῖς es ἀνάγκην ἀφιγμένοις
becomes & necessity.
is supplied
from above,
Le. where
πολεμῆσαι is ingressive.
war
23. διανοεῖσθαι---οἵ. c. 1, 1. Pace
109.
4. τὸ πλῆθος--οἴϊεη of the greater number. 6. ἐκπορίζεσθαι. . ἑκάστοις —as the several states were to carry out & general resolution, it is best with Steup to take
ex. a8 passive and ἑκάστοις as agent.
It is then unnecessary to
read ἑκάστους.
8. καθισταμένοιε---παρασκεναζομένοις (Schol.). 9. ἐνιαντὸς μὲν οὐ 5., ἔλασσον 54—this certainly emphasises the length of time occupied, in spite of their haste, and not the promptitude of the confederacy ; the latter would oe inconsistent
this section).
with
all
that
precedes
(c.
71,
4;
124,
"l'huc. means clearly (it seems to me),
1, and
‘I was
going to say a year was consumed ; but no, it was less than that’; ie. it was not much less. (1) In ii. 2, if the text is
sound, we read that the entry into Plataea took place at the very
beginning
of spring
the battle of Potidasa
431,
and
in
the
sizth month
after
(see c. 62) ; and (2) we are further told
that the first invasion of Attica was eighty days after the seizure of Plataea. Hence the whole time between the battle of Potidaea and the first invasion would be less than nine months, and to arrive at the length of time that separates the resolution of the confederacy from the first invasion,
we must
deduct the time occupied by the events narrated in cc. 63-88
and 118-195, which are:
1. The Athenians built & wall ou north side cf Potidaea and garrisoned it.
NOTES 2. χρόνῳ
ὕστερον Phormio was
251 sent from Attica with
1600 hoplites ; and κατὰ βραχὺ προήει. 8. Phormio built a wall south of Potidaea.
4. The Corinthians called a meeting at Sparta. (At what exact stage of affairs this was done is not clear.)
δ. The Spartans sent to Delphi. 6. The general meeting was held at Sparta,
and the
decision taken. Hence the time would be much less than a year; and it is probable that the un»! ἔκτῳ of ii. 2 is somehow corrupt.
«πρὶν deflaA «ty —under Archidamus.
The account of it is in
ii. 19.
12. exper Beüovro —followin , 88 it turned out, the advice of Archidamus ; see c. 82. He was afterwards blamed for
not having been eager to begin the war. 18. τὸ ἄγος τῆς Ó«o0ü—i.e. those who were under the curse of Athena. The chief authorities for the story of Cylon and
the Alcmaeonidae are, besides Thuc., Herod. v. 71 (Thuc. differs from him, and is perhaps correcting his account), Plut. Sol. 12. The Ath. Pol. init. shows that the attempt of Cylon
preceded the legislation of Draco. ἄγος is ἃ pollution under which a person, a house, or a community labours. 20. Κύλων fjv—two scholia show that the following narrative was admired in antiquity for its clearness and smoothness ; one says ' The Lion laughed here.’
᾿Ολυμπιονίκηε---ἰῃ 640 B.c. (see Sandys on Ath. Pol. init.). 21. τῶν wäAaı—part.,
‘of his date’ (not, ‘of an ancient
family ’).
23. κατ᾽ ἐκεῖνον τὸν xpóvov—his expulsion is supposed to have occurred in 600 or 590 xc. 24.
xpe
f. c. 198,
1.
Both
act.
and
mid.
are
rare
in Attic, the act. sense being given by ἀναιρῶ or μαντεύομαι, the mid. by ἐπερωτῶ. PAGE
110.
1. déwf\Oev—the reading ἐπῆλθον has not enough Ms. support to be acceptable ; but in v. 49 all mas. give Καρνεῖα ἐτύγχανον ὄντα. In two other places in Thuc. all mss. give plur. with neut. plur. subj. —v. 26 ἁμαρτήματα ἐγένοντο ; vi. 62 ἐγένοντο...
εἴκοσι kal ἑκατὸν τάλαντα.
In Xen. the plur. is common.
259
THUCYDIDES
I
4. τι Tpocrfike«y—' had some connexion.’ 7. ἔτι κατενόησε. . (6$ 0v—'had not gone on to consider . . gave no information.’ 8. Avaova—‘for
the Athenians
too have (their festival of
Zeus) the Diasia, which is called the greatest festival of Zeus Meilichius,' in contrast with other festivals of Zeus Meilichius.
Of course καί before ᾿Αθηναίοις does not imply that the Pel. had Diasia, but Διάσια is a brachylogy for ἑορτὴ Διὸς Διάσια. , 10. wavönpel—by the whole people together, not in separate emes. πολλὰ οὐχ ἱερεῖα, ἀλλ᾽ «ἀγνὰ» 0. ἐ.-- Pollux i. 26 (2nd cent. A.D.) says ‘spices are also called ''incense": Thuc. calls them ἁγνὰ θύματα in contrast with rà αἱμάσσοντα xal σφαττόμενα,᾽ i.e. with lepeia. Hence ἁγνά is to be read here.
The Schol. meant.
says
πολλοί
consistent with
many,
‘cakes made
of the
mss.
πανδημεί.
as the Schol.
read here πανδημεὶ
in the shape of animals’ are
will (πολλοί
suggests;
ἑορτάζουσι,
not
do,
without
because
it is in-
δέ could
not= but
and the Schol.
θύουσι
δὲ πολλοί,
cannot have
which
Stahl
prints, since those are the very words of his note, and he would merely have copied out the text verbatim. Lastly
θύματα ἐπιχώρια, meaning sistent with Xen. Anab.
‘cakes’ or ‘incense,’ is not inconvii. 8, where we read that Xen.
had sacrificed holocausts to Zeus Meilichius when at home ; this cannot refer to the Diasia, but must mean another feast of Zeus
Meilichius. )
14. atrots—Cylon and his supporters, who had seized the acropolis.
wpooxadelduevor—this form serves for the aor. as well as pres. 15. ἐγγιγνομένου --- ‘being spent over the matter.’ Cf. χρόνος ἐνέσται p. 61 1. 17. 17. τοῖς ἐννέα É&pyxovev—Megacles the Alcmaeonid was one of them.
18.
abroxpdropo.— without reference to the assembly.
19.
A&pvora—adj.,
sc.
εἶναι,
like
ἄμεινόν
ἐστι,
for
this
is
merely plur. for sing.
τότε BÁ—the ten στρατηγοί did not as yet exist, and the urchons were appointed (not elected by lot) by the Areopagus.
In the time of Thuc. their duties were almost entirely judicial. 26. Tbv βωμόν of Athena.
NOTES Pack
253
111.
1. ἀναστήσαντες = ἀναστῆναι πείσαντες, pends ἐφ᾽ o, lor which cf. c. 108, 1.
and
on
this
de-
τῶν 'AÁOnvalev—partitive: see c. 9, 2. δ. ἐπὶ τῶν σεμνῶν 0. τοῖς Bauois— ‘at the altars of the Eumenides,' probably the most sacred asylum at Athens. The shrine stood by the cleft in the NE. side of the Areopagus, where the Furies were established, after being reconciled to Athena. rois βωμοῖς is however probably spurious; the order is suspicious (cf. v. 50 ἐπὶ τὸν βωμὸν τοῦ Διός), and cf. Arist. Knights 1311 καθῆσθαί μοι δοκεὶ els τὸ Θησεῖον πλεούσαις 1) rl τῶν σεμνῶν θεῶν, and
Thesm. 224 (θέω) ἐς τὸ τῶν σεμνῶν θεῶν. 6. ἐν
τῇ
παρόδῳ
with
καθεζομένους,
on
the
way,
while
passing from the altar of Athena. It was because they feared they were to be killed that they sought asylum a second time. 7. ἐναγεῖς καὶ ἀλιτήριοι τῆς 0«oü—cf. Arist. Eg. 445 ἐκ τῶν ἀλιτηρίων σέ φημι γεγονέναι τῆς θεοῦ (Cleon to the Sausage-man).
ἀλιτήριοι were thought dangerous people to live with (cf. Neil ad 1.c.), and so the Alcmaeonidae were all banished, and at first for ever, Ath. Pol. i. But they returned, and in 508 a
second expulsion took place at the instigation of the opponents of Cleisthenes the Alcmaeonid, who were supported by Cleo-
menes.
12. cracva{éyrev—the party opposed to Cleisthenes and led by Isagoras. Cleisthenes was almost immediately recalled. 13. τὰ ὀστᾶ ἀνελόντες --80 Ath. Pol. i. ἐκ τῶν τάφων ἐξεβλήθησαν, but the incident is there connected with the first
expulsion. 17. wparov— ‘first and
foremost.’
δῆθεν
shows
this
is
sarcastic.
19.
κατὰ τὴν pyrépa—the family tree is as follows :— Megacles, the Archon Alcmaeon
|
Megacles, opponent of Peisistratus
|
ΒΕ
Cleisthenes ὁ τὴν δημοκρατίαν
Ariphron
|
Agariste m. Xanthippus
καταστήσας
Pericles
|
Ariphron
254
THUCYDIDES
20. ῥᾷον —the
I
addition of ἄν is necessary ; cf. c. 57,
5. There is no ex. of pres. Q.G. pp. 6 f.).
in fut. sense after γνομέζω (Stahl,
22. παθεῖν ἂν. . olr«v—the aor. with ἄν expresses a contingency, the fut. a certainty. The subject of ofcew is prob. αὐτό or τὸ πρᾶγμα supplied in sense. 23. eg —‘ since.’
24. τὸ pápos—' partly’; cf. p. 66 1. 9. 26. ἄγων τὴν πολιτείαν ---οἵ. ii. 65 of Pericles τὸ πλῆθος ἦγε. In Ath. Pol. c. 27 τὴν π. ἄγειν els abroís—*'to get political
power into their own hands.’
PacE
112.
2. τὸ ἀπὸ T. &yos.—' the pollution resulting from (the affair of) Mt. Taenarus.’
8. cec yóv—c. 101, 2. 9. Χαλκιοίκον —there was a bronze temple and statue of Athena at Sparta on the Acropolis; hence the name. The τέμενος
covered
ἃ
considerable
space
aud
contained
buildings. 11. τὸ πρῶτον ---' for the first time’ ; see c. 96. 15. 'Epucov(8a—of Hermione, in Argolis.
16. &yev—' without the orders of’; cf. c. 91, 5. ἰδίᾳ in the positive form, the same sense as ἄνευ A. ; cf. p. 103
several
gives, ]. 16.
17. "EAAnvırdv— ‘national,’ that against Persia ; if the reading is right the object is to make an antithesis with rà πρὸς βασιλέα π., but Ἑλληνικὸς v. generally means ‘a war against’ or ‘between Greeks.’ Many edd. accept Μηδικόν (see crit. note). 19. wpdocoav—inf. of purpose ; cf. vi. 8, 2 ξυγκατοικίσαι Acor-
rivous.
The sense
of diplomatic
or secret negotiation
often
underlies πράσσω.
20. ᾿Ἑλληνικῆς---' to rule Greece.’ 21. ἀπὸ rodSe—referring to what follows. c. $8,
For κατέθετο cf.
1.
23. Βυζάντιον —5ee c. 94, 2.
τῇ προτέρᾳ w.—dat. of time without ἐν is possible, as παρουσία implies time ; cf. c. 44 ; ii. 20, ἐκείνῃ τῇ ἐσβολῇ. 26. rére—‘at
that time,’ viz. τῇ προτέρᾳ
παρουσίᾳ : many
edd. following Krüger put róre inside the parenthesis and take
NOTES
255
it with ἑάλωσαν, and this seems more likely. τούτων has been conjectured for τούτους : but τούτους refers prob. to βασιλέως
προσήκοντες kal ξυγγενεῖς, Δῃ ἔλαβεν= ‘captured,’ not ‘received as his share of the spoil.’ PacE
1. τῶν
ἄλλων
113.
€.—the exclusive use of ἄλλος, ‘the rest, i.e.
the allies.'
2. loyyóXov—he
received from Xerxes certain places in the
Troad in reward for his treason, and in the time of Thuc. his
descendants still possessed them. 5. αὐτῷ --βασιλεῖ. 9. δορί-- μάχῃ,
poetical,
a remnant of the
the original letter was composed. γνώμην ποιοῦμαι---᾿ propose.’
Ionic in which
Stephanus altered ἀποπέμπει
&bove to ἀποπέμπω, but the same change from 3rd to 1st pers. occurs in the terms of the Peace of Antalcidas, Xen. Hell. v. i. 31.
10. τὴν
σήν-- σήν-- δ daughter
of yours’
may
be right
(see crit. note).
17. ἤσθη τε καὶ dwooré\Aa—the co-ordination pres. and aorist is common
20. AackvAtrw—Dascylium this province, Φρυγία
of historic
in Thuc. ; cf. c. 181, 2.
in Bithynia was the capital of
ἐφ᾽ Ἑλλησπόντῳ,
or κάτω Φρυγία.
The
Persian empire was divided into twenty satrapies. 22. καί answers Te, so that strictly we should have a second infin., but the constn. of the xal-clause is changed and made independent, as in iii. 94, 3 ; iv. 3, 3; v. 61, 4.
29. ἀντεπετίθει---΄ charged him with . . in return’; Croiset compares Demosth. 34, 28 τὰς ἐπιστολὰς ἃς ἐπεθήκαμεν. The infin. follows as with δίδωμι, as if he had said ἀντεπέστελλε.
24. é&wobeifa.—i.e.
to
show
to
Pausanias,
through
the
messenger, the great king's seal on the letter.
25. ἑαντοῦ--- βασιλέως. Pace
114.
2. τῶν ἀνδρῶν... κείσεταί σοι ebepyerla—lit. ‘in connexion with the men . . 8 service is set down to you in the record for ever.’ τῶν ἀνδρῶν is objective gen. ; εὐεργεσία is the service
256
THUCYDIDES
I
rendered by Pausanias (nof, as Mr. Forbes supposes, due to him).
The benefactors of the Great King were recorded in a
chronicle, Herod. viii. 85. κεῖται is the pass. of κατέθετο, c. 128,4. Pausanias had established a right to consideration for himself and his descendants. 6. ἀρέσκομαι--ποὐ the Ionic use of c. 35, 2. μήτε νὺξ μήθ᾽ Audpa— this and χρνσοῦ xal ἀργύρον δαπάνῃ are quite in t% 1 ersian style: we can har dly doubt t hat the letter is substantially genuine. 9. κεκωλύσθω —5c. ὧν ἐμοὶ ὑπισχνεῖ τι. The 3rd pers. is awkward, and κεκώλυσο has been proposed. 12. κάλλιστα καὶ &ovora—cf. Xen. Anab. 111. i. 6 ἐπήρετο τίνι ἂν θύων κάλλιστα καὶ ἄριστα ἔλθοι.
19. σκευὰς Μηδικάς —the dress was the κάνδυς, a long robe with long broad sleeves over & short tunic, ἀναξυρίδες, trousers, and τιάρα, head-dress; also bracelets (ψέλια) and necklaces (στρεπτοί).
22. τράπεζάν says Nepos;
re—epulabatur
cf. the Persicos
more
Persarum
odi apparatus
luxuriosius,
of Horace.
simplicity of the Greek δεῖπνον is notorious. 24. Bpaxéc.—' small.’ τῇ γνώμῃ -- ἢ ἔμελλε, ‘he meant to.’ 26. ópyj—'temper' in neutral sense; cf. c..122, 1. made men * wait before his doors' as if he wero a satrap. PAGE
4. ἀνεκάλεσαν
‘The
He
115.
—plup. in sense.
7. ἐκ τοῦ Bufavrlov—seo c. 128, 5.
10. TpeáBas—adj. = Τρωικάς ; cf. vi 62 Ἑλλὰς πόλις. The use of such forms as adj. is poetical and Ionic. 14. axvrdAnv— ‘a secret message.’ Plut. Lys. 19 gives a complete description : when ἃ general was sent out from Sparta two sticks of exactly the same size were prepared ; the ephors kept one, the officer the other.
When
the ephors wished
send a secret message, they wrapped a strip their
stick
spirally
and
wrote
on
it.
to
of papyrus round
Thev
then
sent the
papyrus only, and in order to read it, the officer had to wrap 1t again round the other stick. Both sticks and message were called σκυτάλη.
NOTES 15. εἰ δὲ uh—c. 38, 3. 16. wpoayopebav—depending
257
on εἶπον, but
in a different
relation ; οἷ. c. 26, 5.
20. τὸν βασιλέα —and Pausanias was only the kings guardian. 21. Sawpafduevos—by some form of negotiation (probably bribery) he was released from prison. 23.
περὶ αὐτῶν .---ἰ. 6. τῶν κατηγορημάτων (Schol.):
sc. éavrór.
The other reading περὶ αὐτόν is hardly defended by ἐκ τῶν περὶ Παυσανίαν ἐλέγχων c. 185, 2, for the verb is regularly trans. 26. &dv—with ἐτιμωροῦντο. PAGE
116.
4. ἴσος εἶναι τοῖς παροῦσι — ‘to conform ditions,’ τοῖς ἤθεσι τῶν
Λακώνων
(Schol.),
to existing conor better,
‘to the
circumstances in which he found himself’ as a Σπαρτιάτης. (Various alterations of the text have been pro here, e.g. ἐν τοῖς παροῦσι, ‘in his present conduct’ Croiset—or ἐπὶ rois τ. Stein-—but there seems to be no very definite objection to it as it stands.) δ. τά τε ha —the re=‘both,’ looking as to what follows;
so that we have here an explanation
of ὑποψίας.
. παροῦσι.
(Some edd. insert xal before τά.)
6. ἐξεδεδιήτητο κτλ. — ἔξω τῶν. . ἐδεδιήτητο. 7. τὸν rplmoßa—this was a golden tripod supported by a bronze stand in the shape of three serpents twisted together (Herod. ix. 81). It was dedicated after Plataea. The gold rt was afterwards destroyed by the Phocians in the Sacred War (Pausan. x. xiii. 9), but the stand was removed to
Byzantium,
and
still exists
at Constantinople.
See Hicks
Man. Hist. Inscr. p. 11.
10. τὸ ἐλεγεῖον —this *couplet, which ‘he dared to have inscribed on his own authority,' is attributed to Simonides of Ceos. In the Anthology it reads thus: Ἑλλάνων ἀρχαγὸς ἐπεὶ στρατὸν ὥλεσα Μήδων Παυσανίας Φοίβῳ μνᾶμ᾽ ἀνέθηκα τόδε.
ἀρχηγός was a title of the Spartan kings. 14. εὐθὺς rére—at the time that the tripod was offered.
17. μέντοι —although the offensive inscription was removed,
258
THUCYDIDES
I
ἀδίκημα καὶ τότ᾽ ἐδόκει elvar—‘ (this act) was thought even at that time to be a crime.’
The
subject of ἐδόκει is αὐτό,
the act of having the couplet inscribed. by Classen
for
τοῦτ᾽,
and
rór' was first adopted
καὶ ἐπεί γε δὴ ἐν τούτῳ
καθειστήκει
requires it as ἃ contrast of time: also there is no point in καὶ τοῦτ᾽,
88
no
other
offence
mentioned to justify xa.
this is not necessary.
of
P.
in
earlier
times
has
been
Stein inserts τοῦτο after ἀδίκημα, but
18. ἐπεί γε δὴ ἐν τούτῳ καθειστήκει.--ἰ.6. now when he was accused of ‘Medism.’ ἐπεί γε δή is more emphatic than ἐπειδή.
25. οὐδὲ τῶν.
. πιστεύσαντες---Δὴ explanation of οὐδ᾽ ὥς,
,
technical word
—the
full citizen-rights. 27. εἰώθασιν
for an informer who
had
not
—sc. χρῆσθαι. PAGE
117.
4. 'ApyO vos—he was a slave from the Thracian town Argilus 5. αὐτοῦ... dxelve—applying to the same person ; cf. iv. 18, 4; vi. 61, 7 κατέγνωσαν αὐτοῦ καὶ τῶν per’ ἐκείνου : Audoc. 1, 64 εἶπον αὐτοῖς. . ἐκείνοις δέ: conversely vii. 14 εἰ προσγενήσεται.
. πρὸς
ἐκείνους
χωρῆσαι,
διαπεπολεμήσεται
αὐτοῖς :
Plat. Rep. p. 348 c εὐδαίμονα ἐκεῖνον ποιοῦσιν ὑπηρετοῦντες αὐτῷ.
μηνντὴς
γίγνεται,
δεέσας.
. καὶ
παρασημηνάμενος..
λύει---καί joins δείσας to λύει, which should strictly be λύσας:
the constn. is thus changed from partic. to finite verb, as ii.
47 λεγόμενον μὲν. . οὐ μέντοι ἐμνημονεύετο : vii. 18 τῶν ναυτῶν μὲν. . ἀπολλυμένων, οἱ δὲ θεράποντες. . αὐτομολοῦσι.
Stein reads ds δείσας, but no change is needed.
«al does
not join γίγνεται to λύει because the clause with λύει is anterior in time to y. μηνυτής, and such a Aysteron proteron is without
example in Thuc. 6. κατὰ ἐνθύμησιν τινα — ἐνθυμηθείς, ‘because he noticed.’ 8. wapaconpnvduevos— ‘counterfeiting’;
‘for
Thuc.
says
παρασημηνάμενος τὴν σφραγίδα in the sense of παρατυπώσασθαι᾽ Pollux viii. 27. This reading, restored bv Hude, is better
than παραποιησάμενος, which is probably a gloss on it. ἣν ψενσθῇ τῆς δόξης--ἰ.6. if his suspicion about the contents of the letter proved false. He could then replace the seal and go on to Artabazus. Did it not occur to him
that even iu this case he might ‘never return,’ ie. be put to eath ἢ
NOTES
259
9. A καὶ dxe«tvos—i.e. in case Pausanias should ask for the letter back before the messenger left, in order to alter something in it. If the messenger's suspicion about the letter roved false, he would say nothing, but seal up the letter. ut suppose the man's suspicions
proved true, why should he
not have contemplated an immediate visit to the ephors, without giving Pausanias time to ask for the letter back! In int of fact this is what the man did. (The text is suspected y some edd.—e.g. Herwerden and Steup—but the confusion of the messenger's motives seems to come from Thuc.) 14. ἐπίστευσαν ---8ο. that the information they had received from the helots was true.
16. ἀπὸ wapacxeviis—cf. Lysias 13, 22 εἰ μὴ ἐκ παρασκευῆς éunviero, ‘by collusion, or arrangement,’ here with the gen. abs.
17. ἐπὶ Talvapov—the shrine of Poseidon on Taenarus was sanctuary (asylum). 18. axnynerautvov— both σκηνᾶσθαι and σκηνεῖσθαι are else-
where intrans., but here the sense must be trans.: hence Madvig roposed σκενασαμένου, and one inferior M8. gives σκηνωσαμένου: tein reads és διπλῆν. 19. τῶν [Te]—the
spurious.
23. τά ve.
re has
. καὶ TÀÀN
no correlative and dwodalvovros—the
is no doubt position of re
shows that ἀποφαίνοντος is added by an afterthought.
24. ὡς οὐδὲν. . rapaBáXovro—' that he had never hazarded P.'s interests '—a gambling term.
26. προτιμηθείη Sé—ironical: had got. ἐν ἴσῳ-- ὁμοίως. PAGE
this was all the reward he
118.
2. πίστιν. . ávacTác«es —'pledging his word for his departure from the temple,' sc. in safety. (ἐκ τοῦ ἱεροῦ is perhaps a commentator's note on τῆς ἀναστάσεως.)
4. τὰ wpacodépeva—the negotiations with the king. sentence here concluded is & remarkable instance partiality of Thuc. for the circumstantial participle.
12. 8qAécavTros—sc. what was about to happen. dat. of cause.
The of
the
εὐνοίᾳ is
19. ἔνδον öyra—i.e. making sure that he was in the οἴκημα.
260
THUCYDIDES
I
21. ἐξεπολιόρκησαν --[ἢθ terms are taken from the starving out of a city.
22. ὥσπερ elyev—‘as he was,’ ‘in his present condition,’ i.e. shut up in the building; cf. e.g. ii. 46. (In vi. 57, 3 I accepted Krüger's version ‘forthwith’
; but I agree with Steup
that this is wrong.) If he had ‘expired’ inside, the holy place would have been profaned. 25. τὸν ΚΚαιάδαν —the exact site of this ravine called Caeadas is not known : it was in the hills near Sparta. xalara, crevices produced
by earthquake, were so common
in Laconia
that Sparta is called καιετάεσσα in Homer. 26. οὗπερ τοὺς xaxot’pyovs—the Schol. is ἐμβαλεῖν δηλονότι (serlicet). τόπος ὁ Kéadas ὀρωρυγμένος ἐν κακούργους εἰώθασι ῥιπτεῖν. The words of mixed with the text in the Mss. in several probable that οὗπερ τοὺς κακούργους is due ought
to be olwep, but
Λακωνικῇ, ὅπον τοὺς this note have got ways, and it is very to the note. (οὗπερ
this error—which is common
does not count against the genuineness of the words.
in Ms8.—
Volgraff
first bracketed them.) PAGE
119.
2. obwep—the omitted antecedent is ἐκεῖσε. 3. προτεμενίσματι--ὁ
until then unconsecrated.
mpd
. . τοῦ
τεμένους
τόπος (Schol.)
4, 8—i.e. τὸ τὸν τάφον κεῖσθαι ἐν TQ vr.
ὡς KTA.—accus. abs. 7. ἀνδριάνταε---πιοῦ necessarily statues of Pausanias; but symbolic figures consecrated to the gods of the upper world. 15. τοῖς αὐτοῖς —i.e. θανάτῳ.
16. ἔτυχε γὰρ aorpaxtopévos—when this had happened is unknown; 471 B.c. is generally favoured in spite of the statement in Ath. Pol. that Them. was at Athens in 462 B.C. : the year depends upon other events such as the reduction
uncertain.
of
Naxos
(see
c.
137,
2)—of
which
the
date
For a discussion see Sandys on Ath. Pol. o. 2b.
is
20. ἄγειν---85. to Athens.
23.
—by some official act, probably in some dispute
with another state, according to Plutarch with Corinth.
In all
such decrees of honour conferred on a ξένος a clause giving him ἀσυλία was contained ; and on this clause Them. relied.
NOTES 23.
261
a$rév —the Corcyreans ; for this idiom cf. c. 34, 4.
26. ἀπεχθέσθαι --- ἐχθρὸς
(leg.
ἐχθροὺ:)
γενέσθαι
(Schol.).
The Mss. ἀπέχθεσθαι assumes a pres. form ἀπέχθομαι : similar] in vii. 75 ABEFM have αἰσθέσθαι: in from δίγω (Otyyáro).
may
give αἴσθεσθαι as from αἴσθομαι, but Eur. Phoen. 300 the mss. have θίγειν as But that these only occur in forms that
be aorists is very suspicious:
with other such doubie
forms—e.g. αὔξω beside avédyw—the indic. forms occur.
28. κατὰ πύστιν dx. in accordance with inquiry as to
the road he took.’
The opt. is iterative, PacE
2. Μολοσσῶν---ἰὰ Epirus.
120.
What the ‘difficulty’ was that
led Them. to one who was ‘no friend of his’ is not explained. δ. καθέζεσθαι---ΔοΥ. in sense: the mid. form καθίζομαι is not used.
7. οὐκ áfroi— ‘asks him not to. .' 8. ᾿Αθηναίων Seoutve— Then. must have opposed a request from Admetus for Athenian help.
9. καὶ γὰρ ἂν xrvA.—‘ for at the present time I might be ill-treated
by
one
far
weaker
than
you
(ἐκείνου: ἢ ἐκεῖνος,
depending on ἀσθενεστέρου) ; but it is generous (like a
man) to take vengeance on equals (not on inferiors) and equal to them (and not stronger).’
gentle-
when
This curious form of appeal
must be the invention of Thuc.; and we may doubt whether it would have moved such a king.
13. Apelas rıyds— ‘in reference to,’ the gen. of separation parallel
to ἐς τὸ v. σῴζεσθαι.
ἐς τὸ σῶμα
σῴζεσθαι--}.
‘with
reference to preserving
his life,’ i.e. in a matter of life and death.
Recent edd. take τό with σῴζεσθαι:
σῴζεσθαι is mid.
but it is possible Poppo
was right in supposing that in cases like the present the single
article does double duty.
Cf. Plat. Gorg. p. 489 c μηδενὸς ἄξιοι
πλὴν ἴσως TQ σώματι ἰσχυρίσασθα. Note corresponding to σῶμα, has the article.
that
ψυχή
below,
16. ἀποστερῆσαι Gy —* would withhold’; this is the proper sense of ἀποστερεῖν, and hence σωτηρίας is required. 18. ὥσπερ xal—the καί marks the connexion of the two acts, ἀνίστησι---ἐκαθέζετο. ἔχων αὐτόν— μετ᾽ αὐτοῦ. Notice the extreme solemnity of supplication by the life o( the child.
262
THUCYDIDES
I
19. καὶ μέγιστον fy i. Totro—parenthetical. 23. érépav—the Aegean. 24. τὴν "A—sc. πόλι. This Alexander Perdiccas
(see
c. 57).
Thuc.
calls
the
town
was
father
of
*Alexander's'
because it lay south of Macedon proper. Its status caused difficulty at various times, for it never fully acquiesced in Macedonian rule till conquered by Philip the Great. 26. χειμῶνι-[6 wind was north, and unless the captain tacked would carry the ship right into Naxos. 27. ὃ ἐπολιόρκει Ndfov—the accession of Artaxerxes, who had lately ascended
the throne
when
Them. arrived (see $ 4)
took place in 465 B.c. Hence, to make the dates suit, the siege of Naxos was assigned by Schäfer to 466 B.c.; but, judging from the narrative of cc. 89-90, this leaves too short an interval between the siege of Naxoa and the death of Xerxes; for Eurymedon was fought before the latter event, and yet,
apparently, some time after the revolt of Naxos. Hence other modern authorities assign the siege of Naxos to 468, 470 or even 473 B.c.
But then the narrative here cannot be correct.
In Plut. Them. 25, where this passage is used, some mss. have
Θάσον for Νάξον : and this would
suit here better (see c. 100,
2); but there may be a mistake on Thuc.'s part. PAGE
4. 5. uses with
121.
τὴν δὲ ἀσφάλειαν elyac—i.e. ‘his safety depended on.’ péxpv—with μέχρι, μέχρι οὗ and πρίν Thuc. occasionally subj. without ἄν according to the older idiom ; but ἕως plain subj. does not occur.
TÀo0s—'until fair weather came,’ in contrast with χειμών above: this and not ‘until he sailed’ seems to be the sensc ; πλοῦςτεεὔπλοια, as also in lil. 9 πλῷ χρησάμενος kal τριταῖος ἀφικόμενος.
6. ἀπομνήσεσθαι--[ἢ8 ordinary fut. in Attic is μνησθήσομαι, but Herod.
uses μνήσομαι.
11. aérw—for the poetical use of dat. after ἦλθε cf. c. 18, 3. The aor. is pluperf. in sense, and ὕστερον means after his flight. At Athens his goods were confiscated 80 far as they were found, because he was ἃ traitor. 18.
κάτω.
. &ve—as in ἀνά-βασις and κατά-βασις.
15. νεωστὶ βασιλεύοντα ---[ὉΓ νεωστί with imperf. partic. cf. ii. 20 ἀνδρῶν νεωστὶ πόλιν ἐχόντων.
NOTES
268
Ür.—this convenient form of quasi-oblique speech, where the speaker's actual words follow ὅτι, occurs only in prose. 17. tyérepov—referring of course to the royal family.
18. ἐπιόντα dgo(—a fine touch due to self-confidence. 20. ἐν τῷ ἀσφαλεῖ μὲν xrÀ.—' when he retreated (πάλιν belongs to ἀποκομιδή) himself in danger, while I was in safety.'
22. qpádyas—' referring
to’;
cf. c. 87,
2,
but here
the
constn. is xarà σύνεσιν after ἐδήλου ἡ γραφή.
τὴν ἐκ Z. προάγγελσιν τῆς ἀναχωρήσεως -- Herod. viii. 110 relates that Themistocles sent ἃ message to Xerxes saying that he had persuaded the Greeks not to break down the bridges over the Hellespont, and consequently the king might
retreat at leisure. that Herod. says
The story agrees with Thuc. here, except the message was sent from Andros, not
Salamis. The true object of Them. was to cause Xerxes to retreat rapidly, since Xerxes had been once taken in by a false message from Them. (viz. that the Greeks were about to retreat from Salamis, Herod. viii. 75) and would
one also was false.
had in sending the message.
ἀναχωρήσεως
be sure to assume this
Them. now misrepresents the object he had
(Haacke and others refer ri» . .
to the earlier message of Them., viz., that the
Greeks were about to withdraw from Salamis.
Them.
caused the defeat of the king;
By this m
by the /ater one he
rescued the king. This explanation seems simpler; but it looks as if the parenthesis γράψας. . διάλυσιν refers only to
what Them. pretends to have done to serve the king.)
24. ἣν ψευδῶς προσεποιήσατο-- Herod. says Them. ur the Gk fleet to break down the bridges but he was or oped by
the Peloponnesians.
The Athenian fleet was then willing to
go alone, but this Them. successfully opposed. It looks as if Thuc. did not believe in this last part of the story. (Croiset understands ‘which he misrepresented,’ others avoid the appearance of an inconsistency with Herod.) 25. of διάλυσιν---οἴ. e.g. iii. 95, 2 τὴν οὐ περιτείχισιν : vii. 84 τὴν τῶν Κορινθίων οὐκέτι ἑπαναγωγήν.
27. τὴν σὴν φιλίαν --- my friendship for you.’ PaGE 4.
122.
6y —duration of time.
10. τοῦ 'EXAAqvucoó—'about tbe Greeks,’ but in sense this is object of δουλώσειν.
204
THUCYDIDES
I
12. πεῖραν διδούε--58ο πεῖραν λαμβάνω. 13. Av γὰρ. . δηλώσας καὶ. . Äfuos—the with
ἦν
is here joined
to
an
adj.
with
unusual, and some edd. place βεβαιότατα.
aor.
partic.
ἣν : the constn.
is
. δηλώσας between
commas, taking xal as emphasising διαφερόντως τι. Transl. * Them. was in fact one who showed most convincingly natural
wers, and he was beyond all others worthy of the very ighest admiration in this respect.' és αὐτό refers to φύσεως
ἰσχύν : διαφερόντως τι belongs to θαυμάσαι: for μᾶλλον ἑτέρου cf. c. 84, 2 ἧσσον ἑτέρων. 14. φύσεως layiw—Thuc. evidently holds with the old view,
as against the sophists, that φύσις is superior to μάθησις. 15. ἐς αὐτό---ἐς τὸ ξυνετὸν φαίνεσθαι. 16. οὔτε προμαθὼν. . οὔτ᾽ ἐπιμαθών.---᾿ not aiding it (τὴν
ξύνεσιν») by any knowledge acquired before or after,’ i.e. either by learning or by experience. (What time is alluded to in the wpo-
and
erı-?
Some
say
much better, the time when
his entry
he
into
gave any
public life, others,
advice derived from
this £uvesıs—but interpret, ‘his opinion was not based on previous
knowledge, nor, after giving
it, had he to modify it because he
found he was wrong.’ Neither verb occurs elsewhere in Thuc. Croiset sees an allusion to Prometheus and Epimetheus.) 18. 80 ἐλαχίστηε
BovAfs— * with the least consideration.’
19. ἐπὶ πλεῖστον τοῦ yevnooplvouv—those edd. who connect these words understand ‘to the remotest future,’ so that ἐπὶ πλεῖστον refers to time: the objection lies in the sing. τοῦ γενησομένου after the plur. μελλόντων, and so some think it spurious, others join τοῦ γενησομένου to τῶν μελλόντων, which
is very forced.
But all difficulty
disappears if we understand
by τὸ γενησόμενον ‘the particular event that was going to happen' and take ἐπὶ πλεῖστον of extent, as in ἐπὶ πλεῖστον
ἀνθρώπων in c. 1, 2, so that the whole phrase emphasises only the extraordinary accuracy of his eixacía : ‘his forecasts of the future were the best, in every event proving more accurate than those of others.’
ἐπὶ π. τοῦ γεν. in lit. ‘so as to cover the
greatest part (i.e. a greater part than any one else) of just that which was coming.'
20. μετὰ χεῖρας ἔχοι---80 Aeschines 1, 70 ἃ νυνὶ μετὰ x. ἔχετε: = μεταχειρίζοιτο.
21. ἐξηγήσασθαι --᾿ expound his views on it.’ ὧν δ᾽ ἄπειρος εἴη in contrast with ἃ μετὰ χεῖρας ἔχοι= ‘ that
which he took no personal share in,’
NOTES
265
22. οὐκ ἀπήλλακτο---“1 did not fail to,’ ‘was not without the power’; in later prose we should have rov.—Them. lived
before the days of developed oratory.
28. τό τε ἄμεινον f) x «ipov—* the advantage or disadvantage’ of any proposed step. 24. Tb ξύμπαν
εἰπεῖν — parenthetical inf., τό belonging to
ξύμπαν.
25. μελέτης δὲ $rqyr.—' with the shortest preparation,’ ἃ second way in w Ie he showed his power of hitting on the right thing in ἃ minute. The two phrases are not really quite parallel. 28. @—the story was that he drank bull's blood: Thuc. evidently thinks it a foolish tale, Aristoph. Zg. 83. PAGE
128.
4. ἄρτον. . οἶνον. . Sıyov— according to a Persian oustom : of. Plat. Adc. i. p. 123 B ‘he said (the person meant is perhaps Xenophon) he passed a district which the inhabitants called ζωνὴν τῆς βασιλέως γυναικός : and another called ''the mirror" . . καὶ ὀνόματ᾽ ἔχειν ἑκάστους τῶν τόπων ἀπὸ ἑκάστον τῶν κόσμων.᾽ Lampsacus and Myus belonged to the Delian
League, so Them. cannot have actually enjoyed their revenues.
8. el xovres—Cleophantus, a son of Them., lived at Athens. In later times the grave of Them. was located at the entry to Piraeus. 2]. προύλεγον. . μή--ἰη the terms of an ultimatum it is not surprising to see μή where οὐ would be ordinarily used : προλέγω contains
a meaning of advice or warning.
deoree and Aegina see c. 67.
For the Megarian
27. ἐπεργασίαν.---ἐπι- denotes encroachment, as in ἐπινέμομαι.
ths lepäs— ‘he means the land between Megara and Attica
consecrated to the Eleusinian goddesses’ (Schol.).
28. ἀορίστου --- Mr. Forbes says, this seems to be distinct from τῆς ἱερᾶς, and may mean an undefined or ueutral strip of land.
ἀγδραπόδων (é$oBoy fy —this matter is parodied by Aristoph.
in Acharn. 825 f. : runaway slaves from Attica found a refuge in Megara.
266
THUCYDIDES PAGE
I
124.
6. ποιήσαντες--' having called’ through the officials. 7. γνώμας σφίσιν αὐτοῖς προντίθεσαν --' opened a debate,’ 8 technical phrase applying properly to the president of the ecclesia (ἐπιστάτης), who allowed the discussion.
10. ἐπ’ ἀμφότερα γιγνόμενοι---' ranging themselves on both and
i.e. some taking the one view, some the other.
ὡς (χρὴ) μὴ 4.—generally ἐμπόδιος takes dat. of person. » Myr τε kal w. 5.—this explains πρῶτος, and always denotes capacity for public affairs. 19. ‘spirit’; their ardour cools when they have to carry out their resolution.
21. τὰς ἐνμφοράς--rà συμβαίνοντα, ‘events’; so below. per pivotNEA 22. va—these occur together several times, without bete]
ifference of sense.
24. τοῖς x. δόξασιν---[υὖ. perf. in sense=& ἂν δόξῃ. 27. τὰς ξυμφορὰς τῶν «.—' the issues of things (lit. “events following from affairs") can be as incomprehensible in their course as man's thoughts,' so that failure is no proof that 8 resolution was wrong.
29. ὅσα dv—‘ whenever anything' —(év πᾶσιν) ὅσα ἄν. PAGE
125.
3. elpnpivov—in the thirty years’ peace. δίκας διδόναι
καὶ 5.— cf.
c. 28, 2.
The best mss.
give
διαφορῶν from διαφορά : the parallel passages, as cc. 56, 1 and 78, 4 favour διαφόρων from διάφορος, but cf. cc. 28, 5, 146.
8. SvarverGa:—middle. 12. rel«vrato.— pred. with ἥκοντες. 15. περὶ Bpaxéos—' about a trifle’ ; cf. c. 78, 1. 16. Swep—accus. de quo, becoming the subject of καθαιρεθείη. προύχονται = προφασίζονται.
18. ὑπολίπησθε--Δἰοῦ the war has begun. 20.
(x «.—'involves':
ὑμῶν
depends
on γνώμης : ‘the con-
NOTES
267
firmation and trial of your resolution ' are explained in chiastic order by the two clauses that follow. 21. olg—masc. = ἐκείνοις γάρ.
24. σαφὲς ἂν x.— ‘make it clear to them’ that they must deal with you on an equal footing rather than as superiors. 28. καὶ ἐπὶ μεγάλῃ καὶ ἐ. B. w.— ‘be the reason great or small ' for yielding.
The constn. changes from infin. ὑπακούειν
to partic. el£ovres . . ἕξοντες, ‘with the intention of not.’ It would be more usual, but it can hardly be necessary, to have
ὡς after προφάσει. PacE
126.
8. ἀπὸ τῶν Óópolev—masc. 4. πρὸ Slxyns—‘ before,’ meaning arbitration.
Cf. Dem.
instead of proceeding by
23, 28 ἂν ἀφέληταί τις.
. μὴ βουλόμενος
πρὸ δίκης ἐκδοῦναι. τοῖς πέλας--οἵ. c. 33, 1.
5. τὰ δὲ τοῦ
κτλ.---οὈ͵]οοῖ of ἀκούοντες,
but
its
position gives it the effect of an accus. of respect. 8. αὐτονργοί--δι’ ἑαυτῶν τὴν γῆν ἐργαζόμενοι σπάνει δούλων (Schol.).
11. Bpaxéws—‘ only fora short time.’
The object of ἐπιφέρειν
is πολέμους.
13. ναῦς
πληροῦντε = ναῦς
ἃς
πληροῦσιν.
Several
edd.
accept the conjecture πληροῦν, which is very probable. In Plat. Gorg. p. 4940 πληροῦντα is probably a corruption of πληροῦν. Apart from the awkward constn. here there seems
to be no point in πληροῦντες. 15. äwövres—the three particc.
are causal,
and
the full
meaning is ‘since to do that (ναῦς. . ἐκπέμπειν) involves to them (1) absence from their lands ’—(cf. the opposite ἐπὶ τῶν ἰδίων εἶναι Ath. Pol. c. 15), (2) paying the expenses out of
their own money instead of getting it from the state, and (8) being chased off the seas by the Athenians.
16. al δὲ weprovola:—this sentence has direct reference to the financial condition of Athens. The policy of Pericles was to accumulate
a reserve,
so
that
the
elodopd — war-tax
on
property— was seldom levied ; but the Pel. would depend on such a tax; see c. 121, 4. βίαιοι (like βέβαιος always of two
268
THUCYDIDES
I
termine. in Thuc.) is a descriptive epithet to εἰσφοραί in general : they are not free gifts (ἐπιδόσει3). 18. σώμασι.--οἴ, c. 121, 3.
20. τὸ μὲν κτλ.--τὸ μὲν.
. τὸ δέ apply to σώμασι
.
.
χρήμασι, πιστόν and βέβαιον being pred.: lit. ‘having in the one a possession they can rely on—viz. that it may come safe out of the dangers; but in the other a belonging for which
they have no security that they will not spend it before the war ceases.’ 26. πρὸς ὁμοίαν charter ' from dire
&.— ‘against a power differing in The "o under the influence of the
infin. Srav—‘so long as’; cf. o. 142, 1. Pace
127.
1. οὐχ ὀμόφυλοι---ποὶ all Dorians: of course the Athenian allies were not ὁμόφυλοι guidance of Athens.
τὸ ἐφ᾽ ἑαντὸν
(ii. 9, 4), but they were all under the
ἔ σπεύδῃ---ἰ[Π6 verb attracted to ἕκαστος :
τὸ ἐφ᾽ é., ‘what concerns himself’ is object οὗ σπεύδῃ But generally τὸ ἐπί and accus. (1) is adverbial, (2) means ‘as far as concerns,’ or ‘depends on.’
2. μηδέν belongs to the inf. 5. ἐν βραχεῖ μὲν popío—sc. of the whole time spent in the meeting. ἐν extends over τῷ πλέονι. 7. wapaé—‘owing to’; this use is common in Demosth., and cf. Aeschines ii. 80 παρὰ τοῦτο διαφθαρῆναι, ὅτι. παρὰ τοῦτο οὐκ ἦλθεν, ὅτι...
. : 111. 80
8. PAdyay—sc. τὰ κοινά. 9. ὑπέρ---" in place of.’ 12. μέγιστον -Ξὃ μέγιστόν ἐστι. 15. uevero(—act. ; Aeschines 3, 168 ῥητορικήν δειλίαν δημόσιος καιρὸς
οὐκ
ἀναμένει:
Demosth.
4,
37
ai
τῶν
πραγμάτων
οὐ
μένουσι καιροὶ τὴν ἡμετέραν βραδυτῆτα.
17. τὴν μὲν γὰρ xrA.—this is taken in two ways: (1) τὴν μέν object of παρασκευάσασθαι &nd πόλιν ἀντίπαλον in apposition— ὥστε γενέσθαι πόλιν ἀντίπαλον (Krüger etc.) ; (2) τὴν μέν accus. of respect, ‘as regards the one’ (Shilleto, Classen, etc.). The
sense is clearly given by Arnold:
‘ Pericles is distinguishing
NOTES between
two
different
methods
269 of
ἐπιτείχισις,
the
one
by
founding a city in the neighbourhood of Athens strong enough to interfere with her trade and be a check on her power, πόλιν ἀντίπαλον : the other
Attica,
as
strongholds
by merely
raising one or two
for plundering
parties
to
country in constant annoyance and alarm, φρούριον.
forts in
keep
the
The only
difficulty is that ἐπιτείχισις is nowhere found of a rival city founded, in time of peace; intended.
hence (2) is probably
the constn.
18. 4 που δή----΄of course,’ then, sc. χαλεπόν ἐστι. 19. ἐκείνοις ἡμῶν ἀντεπιτετειχισμένων
---[}8 seems to refer
to the certainty that Athens would reply to an ἐπιτείχισις by taking similar measures in Peloponnesian territory (Pylus, Cythera): hence we look for a future ; and ἀντεπιτειχιουμένων, ἀντεπιτετειχισομένων or the insertion of ἄν has been proposed.
Another view is that Athens herself is meant ; she is already Standing as an ἐπιτείχισις threatening any post that Sparta might establish in Attica. Since an ἐπιτείχισις always occurs in an enemy's country, this could only be justified by supposing
that Pericles uses the term loosely for the sake of the antithesis. But it certainly looks as if something to be done by Athens
is meant.
22. atvroporlars—by
desert to them. in after years.
25. πλέον
encouraging
the slaves in Attica
to
This actually happened in the case of Decelea
γὰρ ἔχομεν κτλ.---ἐμπειρίας
depends
on
πλέον
ἔχομεν, *we have more experience of land operations through our naval experience than they have in naval operations from their service on land.' Pericles alludes to the use of Athenian fleets on hostile coasts in connexion with descents on the land (ἀποβάσει). The knowledge of the Pel. coast.line would
enable them to choose the right point for an ἐπιτείχισις. 28. τὸ B&é—the δέ answers the μέν of 8 8. PAGE
128.
2. αὐτό---τὸ ναυτικόν.
6. ἐφορμεῖσθαι---“ being blockaded.’ 9. ἐν τῷ μὴ μελετῶντι.---ἐν= ‘owing to,’ as often ; for the neut. partic. with art. as subst. cf. τὸ δεδιὸς αὐτοῦ c. 86, 1. 13. ὅταν ruxg— ' as occasion arises,’ i.e. casually. ἀλλὰ padrAov—se. δεῖ,
270
THUCYDIDES
I
15. xwwhoavres—cf. c. 93, 2. 19. classes of
vrov—'in case we embark.’ The two highest citizens—Irreis and πεντακοσιομέδιμνοι---ϑεγνοα on
board only on occasions of great danger.
The citizen crews
consisted ordinarily of ζευγῖται and θῆτες. 20.
vó8«—i.e. τὸ ἀντιπάλους εἶναι κτλ.
21. kvfiepvfrras — pred. 22. ὑπηρεσίαν --- ‘crews,’
collective,
hence
the
plur.
in
agreement.
24. thy τε abrot—he would not again be able to set foot in his own city since it was part of the Athenian empire. 26. ἕνεκα governs δόσεως : ὀλίγων ἡμερῶν depends on μισθοῦ. Pericles assumes that the Pel. fleet would not be able to keep the sea for any considerable time. PAGE
129.
3. οὐκ ἀπὸ τοῦ ἴσον peydAa—lit. ‘other important things (μεγάλα) on
a greater scale,’ i.e. ‘have the advantage of them
in other important
matters.’
This
refers back
to what
has
preceded, and is not further explained, for Thuc. does not here
want to give a detailed account of the Athenian
is done in the second book.
position : this
The ref., as Steup says, is especi-
ally to the fleet.
6. οὐκέτι ἐκ τοῦ Öpolov— ‘then it will turn out that it is much worse.’ 13. ὅτι ἐγγύτατα rovrov—i.e. putting ourselves in thought as nearly as possible in the position of islanders. 14. olxlag—those the
outside
Athens.
During
the
invasions
population of Attica had to crowd into the city, as Athens
could not bring into the field an army strong enough to oppose the Pel. invading force.
17. ὀργισθέντας--we must not let our indignation at our losses drive us into a decisive action with a superior enemy.
20. mporamdAAvraı—for the pres. in fut. sense cf. c. 121, 4 ἁλίσκονται. fjcvx &covev—sc. οἱ ξύμμαχοι : they will join the enemy. 25.
κτῶνται---' gain,’ meaning with ἄνδρας ' produce.’
NOTES
PaGE
271
130.
1. ἐς ἐλπίδα .---ἐς is properly ‘ bearing on,’ ‘ tending to,’ as in λέγειν τι εἰς τὸ πρᾶγμα (Demosth. 57, 7) etc.
2. ἣν ἐθέλητε---Α4}}] this is prophetic, if, as is almost certain, it was really said by Pericles and not put into his mouth by Thuc. after the event.
7. ἐκεῖνα pév —i.e. advice as to the conduct of the war, which is best given during the war itself. For the present (νῦν δέ) our course is clear.
11. ξενηλασίας---ἰ 686 expulsions took place from time to time, no doubt by order of the ephors. Plato suggests ironically that the Spartans used them when they wanted
privacy for the
study of philosophy ; Xenophon says they feared corruption of the traditional character by contact course, *enact' in their laws.
wlth
ξένοι.
ποιῶσι,
of
12. οὔτε γὰρ ἐκεῖνο κωλύει---οὐ κωλύει ‘there is no hindrance to’ stands for οὐδὲν κωλύει in Aristoph. Av. 463, and in two or
three passages from later authors.
Hence there is probably
no need to insert οὐδέν here. ἐκεῖνο. . TróB«— the ξενηλασίαι and Μεγαρέων y*éwpua—there is as little to forbid the one as the other in the thirty years' truce.
16. σφίσιν ἐπιτηδείως---806 c. 19 ; alluding to the form of constitution.
The Schol. says he thinks τοῖς A. is ἃ gloss on
σφίσι.
18. αὐτοῖς ἑκάστοις
—sc. ἐπιτηδείως.
20. ἄρξομεν, ἀρχομένους--- we will not be the first to fight, but if they enter on a war, we will retaliate.' The difference between dpxw and ἄρχομαι is not important to the sense, but it has 8 rhetorical effect. Pace
131.
2. γνώμῃ —' insight’: frequently contrasted with τύχη. 4. ἐς τάδε προήγαγον atrd—‘ brought our empire to this’ ; repeated almost in the same words by Alcibiades in vi. 18. ὧν Ξ- τῶν πατέρων. 18, τὸ ξύμπαν —in contrast with καθ᾽ ἕκαστα ὡς ἔφρασε.
272
THUCYDIDES
I
15. ἐπὶ ἴσῃ καὶ ὁμοίᾳ---. 27, 1. 17. αἰτίαι M4 —taking up c. 28, 5. 22. &xnpóxTes—there could be no communication without a herald after war had begun. At ἀκηρύκτως, with which strictly the sentence should end, Thuc. suddenly adds ἃ qualification.
GREEK
INDEX
εἴν The reference is to the page on which the note appears.
ἄνεμον τηρεῖν 203
Α
ἀντειπεῖν
ἀξιολογώτατος μένων 138
αἰεί with τις and adj. 135 αἱρεῖν ‘defeat’ or ‘capture’ 154 αἰσθάνεσθαι ‘ be intelligent’ 211 αἰτία 171, 208, 208, 272; ἐν αἰτίᾳ ἔχειν 182
214;
ἀκρίβεια 169 ἀκριβῶς πράσσειν 233 ἀλιτήριος 253 ἀλλά in altercation 220 ἀμαθία 224
222 ; κατ᾽ à. 159
ἀνάγκαι *coercive measures' 233 ἀναγκαῖος 137, 208, 224 ἀνακαλῶ 141
227
'place of retreat'
προγεγενη-
χθεσθε 215
ἀπηλλάχθαι ‘lack’ 265 ἀπίστως for ὥστε ἄπιστα εἶναι 168 ἀπό:
d. τοῦ ἴσου 270;
ἀνθρωπείου
τρόπου
παρασκευῆς
259;
ὁρμᾶσθαι
ἄμεινόν ἐστι 243, 252
ἀμύνεσθαι and ἀμείβεσθαι 190 ἀμφότερος 158; ἐπ᾽ ἀμφότερα
τῶν
ἀξίωσις ‘claim’ 185; *reputation’ 206 ἀπέχει and ἀπεῖχε 201 ἀπεχθέσθαι and ἀπέχθεσθαι 2601; ἀπήχθησθε and ἀπή-
αἴτιον
ἀκίνητα νόμιμα 211
ἀναχώρησις
in opposi-
ἀντίπαλος ‘only equal’ 247
ἀδικεῖν 219
αἴτιος with infin. as subst. 153
'propose
tion’ 189 ἄντικρυς 247 ἀντιλογία 179, 212
ἁβροδίαιτος 145 ἁγνὰ θύματα 252 ἄγος 251 ἀγώνισμα 170 ἀδεής ‘not feared’ 184
160;
227;
d. τοῦ
216; d.
ἀφ᾽
ἀφ᾽ ὧν 156;
οὗ 148, ἀ. πρώτης
217 ἀποβάλλειν 201 ἀποδασμός 156
ἀποδεικνύναι ‘point to’ 175 ἀποζὴν 136
ἀπολαμβάνειν 146 ἀπομνήσομαι 202 ἀπόστασις 189
273
d.
ἐχυροῦ
THUCYDIDES
214
ἀποστερεῖν 188, 206, 26] ἀποτειχίζειν 208 ἀποχρῆσθαι 206
I
γνώσομαι ‘shall adopt a policy’ 218 γοῦν 187, 166
215
ἀρέσκειν 186 ; mid. 182 ; pass.
256 ἀρετή ‘fertility ' 137
A
ἄριστος : ἡ ἀρίστη τῆς γῆς 197 ἀρχή 230, 282 ; ἀρχαί 227 ἄρχω and ἄρχομαι 271 ἀσθενής 143
ἀσφαλής 207 ἀτείχιστος * not walled off' 202 αὔξησις glossed by δύναμις 207 αὐτερέτης 152 αὐτομολίαι 269
αὐτός aud ἐκεῖνος of the same person 258 αὐτουργός 267 αὑτῶν -- ἡμέτερα αὐτῶν 221 ἀφνειός 158
δέκα and τέσσαρες 199
δηλοῦν 221 ; with partic. 168 διά: 3. κινδύνων ἔχειν 191; de’ ἀσφαλείας 162 ; διὰ πλείονος )( αὐτίκα 250
διαιρεῖν 224 “διάλυσις 263
διανοεῖσθαι with ellipse of infin. 134
Διάσια 252
διαφέρειν 208 διάφορος 198 ; rà διάφορα 205 διαχείρισις πραγμάτων 232 διεκπλεῖν 195 διεκπλοῦς 194
βασιλεία 16] βέβαιος 180
δίκας διδόναι 176, 266
βελτίων λόγος 286
δίοτι * why
βίᾳ 151, 235 βίος ‘livelihood’ 143 βουλόμενον, τό 226 βραχέως 267 βραχύς 218, 226, 256; éri βραχύ 242; περὶ βραχέος
ἐπὶ βραχείᾳ
217
διπλάσιος F 151 δίχα ψηφίζεσθαι 189
βιάζομαι 135, 218
266; 267
δέ in apodosis 154 ; δ᾽ οὖν and γοῦν 201 . δεδιός, τό 183
προφάσει
δοκεῖ with different constrs. 139 δουλεία 147 δουλεύειν τῇ yp 220 δύναμις, concrete 172, 181 δύναται μάλιστα εἶναι ‘may be called ' 223 δυοῖν ἁμαρτεῖν 181
Γ
γάρ, explanatory 134 ; γάρ and δέ 189 γενησόμενον, τό 264 γέρα 174
Ε ea» with ellipse of infin. 210 ἑαυτῶν πλουσιώτεροι 147
decision’
εἰ μὴ εἰ 162 ; εἰ with opt. ina
217 ; γνώμην ποιεῖσθαι 205 ; γνώμης παραίνεσις 229 ; γνώ-
γνώμη 244 εἰσὶν ot 146 ἐκ for ὑπό 166 ; ἐκ τοῦ εὐθέος 182 ; ἐξ ἴσου νέμειν 248
γνώμη
208;
‘legal
μας προτιθέναι 266 ; γνώμη )ί σώματα 209
GREEK éxvixay 168 éAaccoUcÓat
‘be at a disadvan-
tage' 216 ᾿Ἑλληνοταμίαι 232 ἐλπίζω 133 ἐν ἀδήλῳ κινδυνεύεσθαι
ἀπόρῳ
ἔχεσθαι
218 ; ἐν
173;
259 ; ἐν τοῖς πρῶτοι
ἐν ἴσῳ 144:
ἐν
πόρῳ κεῖσθαι 244; ἐν οἷς ‘before’ or ‘among whom’ 205 ; ἐν πλέονι, of time 212 ἐναγής 253 ἐναλλαγῆναι 244
ἐνδεές, τό 217 ἐνεῖναι 220 ἐντομή 230
INDEX
275
ἐπιχρῆσθαι 189 ἐρωτᾶν τὰς πύστεις 148 es: ἐς ἴσον καθιστάναι 187; ἐς τὸ παραχρῆμα ἀκούειν 170 ; ἐς τὸ φανερόν 146 ; ἐς τὸ σῶμα σῴζεσθαι 261 ἐσβάλλειν 198
ἐσγράφεσθαι 179
ἕτερος with gen. 176 ἑτοίμως 220
ἑτῶν δύο xal τριῶν 221 εὐεργεσίαν προυφείλειν 179; εὐεργεσία κεῖται σοί 255 εὐεργετεῖν 260 εὐθὺς ἀπὸ παλαιοῦ 139 εὐνομεῖσθαι 168
ἐντός, of place 162
é£aprvaóue0a. and -ώμεθα 246 ἑξῆς with πᾶν 166 ἐξιέναι, Ionic use of 192 ἐπάγειν ψῆφον 225
ἔφοδος ‘intercourse’ 144 ἔχειν ἐν θεραπείᾳ 197; & τὸ πλέον 191; ἔσχον ‘ refrained from’ 289 ; ἔχεσθαι ἐν ἀπόρῳ 178 ; ἔχεσθαι 219
ἐπειδή after χρόνος 145 ἐπελθεῖν 209 ἕπεσθαι 190
Ζ
ἔπηλυς 148 ἐπί: ἐ. μακρότερον 188 ; €. πολύ,
of time 137,
145;
140, 163, 201;
of space
208;
Η
é. τὸ μυθῶδες
‘in the direction of’ or ‘into the region of’ 168; τὸ ἐφ᾽ éavróv
ζευγνύναι 177
ἐ,
τῶν
ἡγήσασθαι ‘consider’ 286
σεμνῶν
θεῶν 253; €. φανεροῖς 206 ; ἐπ᾿ ὠφελίᾳ 140, 218; € μεγάλῃ προφάσει 267 ; é. τῇ
Θ θύματα 252
ἴσῃ καὶ ὁμοίᾳ 175
ἐπιβουλή and ἐπιβολή 231 ἐπιγνῶναι 208 ἐπιδημιονργός 198 ἐπιεικές, τό 216
ἐπικράτησις 189 ἐπιμαχία 192 ἐπιμιγνύναι 186
ἐπιπαριέναι 200
ἐπιστρέψαντες and ἐπὶ Στρεψάν τε 200
ἐπιφοιτᾶν 220
ἰσθμός 201
ἴσος εἶναι τοῖς παροῦσι 257 ; τὸ ἴσον νέμειν 210 : οὐκ ἀπὸ τοῦ
ἴσου ‘on ἃ larger scale’ 270 K
καθαιρεῖν ‘crush’ 142 καθαιρετός and καθαιρετέος 246
THUCYDIDES
2706 καθιστάναι
194,
240;
καθ.
εστῶτος absolute 216 καί emphasising a whole phrase 209;
καὶ τότε
καὶ
νῦν 225;
καὶ ὥς 192; “and in particular’ 161; ‘in fact’ 208 Ka:ddas 260 κάλλιστα καὶ ἄριστα 256 197;
τὸ
x.
αὑτούς
180;
x.
μετὰ χεῖρας ἔχειν 264 μετοικία 138
μέχρι οὗ 216; μ. τοῦδε ὡρίσθω 211 μή after κωλύματα
201;
μήτε.
. re 210
x.
καταβοᾶν 204 κατακομιδὴ 244
κατάφαρκτος 158 καταφωρᾶν 221
N
νέμω ‘assign’ 210;
E
κοινοῦν and κοινωνεῖν 187 κράτιστος 137 κρίσεις ποιεῖν 217 κρώβυλος 145 accus.
‘control’
243 ; mid. 136 νεοχμοῦν 155 νόμιμα, of Spartan institutions 211 νόμος 217
κατοικεῖσθαι 244 κοινόν, τό 220
with
τὸ μὴ
225 ; apprehension 226; with
ὀλιγαρχίαν
165; x. ἡσυχίαν 215; x. ἐνιαυτόν 220 ; x. ἑκάστους 140 ; x. χρόνους 242
κωλύω
161;
μυθῶδες 169 ; in prohibition
partic. 242
καλῶς κεῖσθαι with gen. 184 κατά, distributive 140 ; x. σφᾶς μόνας
I
182;
ξενηλασίαι 271
ξυγγράφειν 188
ξυμβαίνειν with ellipse of infin.
ov
κωλύει 271 A λείπεσθαι with gen. 151 λεπτόγεων, τό 137 λίπα 146
λιποστράτιον 233 λογάδες 207 λόγῳ ‘in debate’ 168 Μ
233 ξυμβόλαιαι δίκαι 216 ξύμμαχοι not technical 226 ξυμφέρεσθαι 148, 170 ξυμφορά
‘event’ 266
ξυναφίστασθαι ‘revolt together’ 199 ξυνεξέρχομαι and ξυνέρχομαι 142 ξυντυχία 181
Oo Ὀλύμπια 25]
ἐπήλθεν
or
ἐπῆλθον
μακρὰ τείχη 287
ὁμαιχμία 164
μᾶλλόν τι 194 ; μᾶλλον f) κατά 185 μείζω, τά 146 μέλλησις 207
ὁμοῖα and ὁμοίᾳ 174, 246 ὁρᾶν with different constrs. 196 ὀργή 247, 206 ; ὀργῇ φέρειν 179
μέρος, τό 214 μετανίστασθαι 155
ὅσον = Gore 136 οὐ after εἰ 246 ; οὐ μὴν οὐδέ 141 οὔτε... τε 144
GREEK ὄχλος ' population’ 220 ὀψὲ db’ ob 160
προκατάρχεσθαι 174 προκινδυνεύειν 218 πρός : mw. πολλὰ
παρά:
v.
πολύ
177;
οἱ
θάλασσαν 147; 'owing 268 παραγγελλόμενα, τά 246 παραγίγνεσθαι 16] παράδειγμα 138 παραμένειν 215
s. to'
παρασκευὴ 259
πρότερον ἤ 207
προτιμᾶν, προύχειν πρόφασις προφέρειν
ironical 259 174 172 249 Σ
σιδηροφορεῖσθαι 144 σκενὴ Μηδική 256
παρατυχόν 216 παρόμοιος 219
σκηνᾶσθαι, -εἶσθαι, -οὔσθαι 259 σκυτάλη 256 σπένδεσθαι 1θ4 σωφροσύνη ἔμφρων 228
παρόντα, τά 257 πειρᾶν 195
πεντηκόντορος 159
πέρας : ἐκ περάτων γῆς 207 περί 160, 199, 207 περιβάλλεσθαι τείχη 147 περιίστασθαι ἐς 217 περιόντι = περιιόντι 178
περιορᾶν with infin. 178 περιπίπτειν 19] πιστόν, τό 204
πληροῦντες and πληροῦν 267 πλοῦς = εὔπλοια 262
πλωιμωτέρων ὄντων 146 attraction 227
ποιεῖν ‘describe in verse’ 152 ποιεῖσθαι *obtain' 148, 173; π. πόλεμον 176 πολέμια, τά 165 πολύς : πολλοῦ χρόνου 140 ; διὰ πλείονος 250 : ὁ πλεῖστος τοῦ
χρόνου 178 πρό: τὰ πρὸ αὐτῶν 184 προβάλλεσθαι 186 σθαι 203
T τάσσειν, ‘assess’ 232 ; mid. 234 τεῖχος 202, 203
τεκμαίρεσθαι, with structions 134
and
προσγίγνε-
two
con-
τεκμήριον 135 τέλη, τά 199
τέττιγες χρυσοῖ 145 τηρεῖν ἄνεμον 208
τίθεσθαι εὖ 215 τιμωρίαν ποιεῖσθαι 178 τότε 225, 235 τράπεζα IIepouc 256 Tpoás, as adj. 256 Τρωικά, τά 139 τύραννος πόλις 248 τυγχάνειν 180, 209 : τυχόντα ΟΥ τυχόντων 248
ποταμός 162
προγίγνεσθαι
211;
προσκοπεῖν 248 προσπαρακαλεῖν 204 προστυγχάνειν 232
παρασημήνασθαι 258
παρασκεναζόμεθα or -ώμεθα 224
ποθέν, by
ἰέναι
χωρεῖν 7. 164
τά 139
πανταχοῦ 187 πάνυ 140
271
προειπεῖν 175, 191
II παλαιά,
INDEX
T ὑπάρχειν, ‘begin’ 229 ὑπειπεῖν 188
THUCYDIDES
218 ὑπηρεσία 270 ὕποπτος 215, 226 ὑποτοπτῆσαι 166
ὕστερον % 200
I
Χαλκίοικος 254 χηλή 201 χρῆσθαι of oracles 251 χρόνοι 238, 242 χωρίον 232
d φέρεσθαι 206 φεύγειν 239 φθάνειν 181 φονεύειν 195
ψῆφος 167
φόρος 232 φρουρεῖν 202 φυγαί 171
Q ws εἰπεῖν 184 ; ws εὐνοίας ἔχει 169 ; ws καί 185
φύσις 264
X χαλεπός 166, 168
ὥσπερ ἔχει 260
ὠφελεῖν 222
ὠφελία 140, 176, 179, 182, 249
ENGLISH
INDEX Attica,
Α accusative, adverbial in plural 136 ; of ıneasure 246
Agamemnon,
number
of
his
fleet 152
Alcmaeonidae 253 anacoluthon 139,
171,
178,
210
Andocides, doubt tion of 196 complexive
gressive
149,
C chronology of Thuc. 242 Cimon and the Messenian war
164;
133;
in-
236 comparative degree 167 comparison, illogical 133
timeless
142 ; for luperfect 155, 104 apposition, limiting, 139, 163 arbitration 176
Arcadia,
of its soil
primitive
attraction of preposition 163 ; of relative 135, 195, 226; of adjective 137; of adverb 227; of mood 228; of tense 186 B brachylogy 188
about men-
antithesis, artificial 176, 189
aorist,
barrenness
137 ; invasion of 270
constructions,
191, 211 co-ordination
character
of 137
two
combined
of
dissimilar
clauses 133, 134
Archidamus on the war 222 article, distributive 156; omitted 151, 163; not re-
Corcyra, position of 185 Cylon, story of 251
peated 147; repeated 171; with attributive predicate
D
172
Dascylium 255 dative, poetical use of 262; 254 with ὠφελῶ 222; of person Athens, grant of citizenship at judging 153, 172; of cause 139; oratory at 223; re194 lations to allies 217; fleet E of 160; desertion of slaves eclipses 171 269 Athena, temple of, at Sparta
279
THUCYDIDES
280
I M
elision, Aeolic 178 ellipse of infin. 184
emphasis secured by order of market outside town 200 Megerian decree 191 middle, reflexive 146
words 140 ephors 256 umenides, altars of the 253 Eurystheus, fate of 148
Mycenae, insignificance of 150
N
example, meaning of, in Greek rhetoric 138
neuter plural 139, 147 nouns, abstract 109 F
fractions 150
genitive 146;
G definition
of
objective
169;
optative
169;
of
absolute
dative
absolute
240;
246;
O and indicative
sphere
Ρ
impersonal in
place
of
of comparison
176 ; order of partitive 193 Greece, early condition of 138 ; migration in 135
parataxis 149, 175 paronomasia 182 participle, conditional omitted 180;
137,
259;
predicative
attributive,
H Hellanicus 233 Herodotus and Thuc. 167, 169
Hipparchus and Hippias 166
175;
in maxims 244 Oratio recta and obliqua combined 144
186;
circumstantial
co-ordinate
use
167;
of
outside
144; article
155 Pausanias and Persia 255
Pentecontaetia, the passage so called 225
Homer, references to 152, 156 ; Perdiccas of Macedon 198 Pericles, his war 268
Homeric ships 153, 160
infinitive of purposes 154 ; restrictive 168 instrumental case 146
uses
164,
255
L logographers 193 long walls 237 Lycurgus 163
of
the
riod, forms of 138 ersian dress 256
I
Ionic
forecast
166;
forms
personal construction 166 Phaeacians and Scheria 174 piracv 144
plural verb with neuter plural subject 252 resent for future 246 rodicus 208
pronouns, reflexive 166 purpose expressed by τοῦ with infin. 142
Pydna and Macedon, 262
ENGLISH
INDEX
281
R
T
rolative 151; not repeated 183 | text 134, 138, 141, 142, 148, 149, 153, 154, 155, 161 repetition of statement in Themistocles 214; walls of negative form 244
rhetoric
obscuring
the
sense
209
229, 230;
264;
his natural powers
his
oratory
265;
mysterious manner of 227;
messages of, to Xerxes 214, 208; at Sparta 214; in Epirus 261; gift of towns
S
sacrifice, ceremonies of 174 to 265 ; his grave 265 Salamis, numbers of Greek | Thirty Years' truce 208 fleet at 213 tri dedicated after Plataea Sparta, poverty of 220 ; out257 ward appearance of 150 ; relation of, to tyrants 163, Troy, siege of 153, 154
248; expulsion of strangers
from 250
Spartan
271;
dilatoriness
character
204,
218 strategi, number of 199 subject, divided 141; fied 164 Sybota 197
tyranny in Greece 157
of
209,
V
villages, early Greek 138
modi-
Z Zeus Meilichius 252
THE
END