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English Pages 660 [658] Year 1968
PLUTAECH'S LIVES WITH AN ENGLISH TRANSLATION BY
BERNADOTTE PERRIN IN ELEVEN
VOLUMES
II
THEMISTOCLES AND CAMILLUS AND CATO MAJOR CIMON AND LUCULLUS
ARISTIDES
LONDON
WILLIAM HEINEMANN LTD CAMBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS
HARVARD UNIVERSITY PRESS MOMLIX
First Printed, March 1914 Reprinted, 1928, 1948, 1959
rsi
Printed in Great Britain
CONTENTS PADS
PREFATORY NOTE
vii
ORDER OF THE PARALLEL LIVES IN THIS EDITION TRADITIONAL ORDER OF THE PARALLEL LIVES THEMISTOCLES
CAMILLUS
...
.
ix
....
X
.
1
93
ARISTIDES
209
MARCUS CATO
301
COMPARISON OF ARISTIDES AND CATO
384
CIMON
403
LUCULLUS
469
COMPARISON OF CIMON AND LUCULLUS
610
DICTIONARY OF PROPER NAMES
623
PREFATORY NOTE As
in
the
between the
volume of
first
Sintenis
this series,
agreement (Teubner, 1873-1875) and
Bekker (Tauclmitz, 1855-1857) texts of the Parallel been taken as the basis for the text.
Lives has
one to the other where they differ, and any departure from both, have been indicated. The more important ameliorations of the preference of
Any
text which have been secured by collations of Parisinus 1676 (F*)
The
have been introduced. these first
MSS.
volume.
is
Codex
and Codex Seitenstettensis
(S),
relative importance of
explained in the Introduction to the No attempt has been made, naturally,
to furnish either a diplomatic text or a full critical
apparatus.
The reading which
the
notes
and
critical
also, unless
is
follows the colon in
that of the Teubner Sintenis,
otherwise stated in the note, of
the Tauchnitz Bekker.
Among
editions of special Lives included in this
volume should be noted that of Fuhr, Themistokles und Perikks, Berlin,
1880, in
the Haupt-Sauppe vii
PREFATORY NOTE series of
und
annotated texts
;
that of Blass, Themistokles
Perikles, Leipzig, 1883, in
annotated texts
;
and the same
Cato, Leipzig, 1898, in the
editions bring F*
the Teubner series of
and S
editor's Aristides und
same
series.
into rightful
All these
prominence as
This has been done also by in his edition of the Tkemistocles (Macmillan, Holden,
a basis for the text.
1892).
The translations of the Tkemistocles, Aristides, and Cimon have already appeared in my " Plutarch's Themistocles and Aristides" (New York, 1901), and '^Plutarch's
Cimon and
Pericles
"
(New York,
and are reproduced here (with only
1910),
slight changes)
by the generous consent of the publishers, the Messrs. Charles Scribner's Sons.
The
translations
of the Camillus, Cato, and Lucullus appear here for the first time. All the standard translations of the Lives have been carefully compared
aud
utilised,
including that of the Lucullus by Professor Long. B.
New Haven,
Connecticut, U.S.A.
February, 1914.
vm
PERRIN.
I
ORDER OF THE PARALLEL LIVES IN THIS EDITION IN THE CHRONOLOGICAL SEQUENCE OF THE GREEK LIVES. Volume (1)
(2)
(3)
Volume (4)
I.
Theseus and Romulus. Comparison. Lycurgus and Numa. Comparison. Solon and Publicola. Comparison. II.
Themistocles and
(22) (7)
Paulus.
Volume
Demosthenes and Cicero.
(17)
Comparison. Alexander and Julius Caesar.
Comparison. Cimon and LucuUus. Comparison.
Volume (5)
Pericles
Volume (15) Sertorius
Comparison. Phocion and Cato the Younger.
(21)
Volume IX. Demetrius and Antony. Comparison. PyrrhusandCaiusMarius.
III.
Comparison. Nicias and Crassus.
(11)
Comparison.
Volume (6)
IV.
(19)
Alcibiades and Coriolanus.
Lysander and Comparison.
Sulla.
(10)
(8)
and Pompey.
Comparison. Pelopidas and Marcellus. Comparison.
Philopoemen and
Flam-
ininus.
Comparison.
Volume XL
Volume V. (16) Agesilaiis
Volume X. Agis and Cleomenes, and and Caius Tiberius Gracchus. Comparison.
Comparison. (12)
VIII.
and Eumenes.
(18)
and Fabius Max-
im us. (14)
VII.
(20)
Aristides and Cato the Elder.
(13)
Comparison. Timoleon and Aemilius
Comparison.
Camillus. (9)
Volume VI. Dion and Brutus.
(24) Aratus.
(23) Artaxerxes. (25) Galba. (26)
Otho.
IX
THE TRADITIONAL ORDER OF THE PARALLEL LIVES. (1)
Theseus and Romulus.
(2)
Lycurgus and Numa.
(3)
Solon and Publicola.
(4)
Themistocles and Camillus.
and Fabius Maximus.
(5)
Pericles
(6)
Alcibiades and Coriolanus.
(7)
Timoleon and Aemilius Paulus.
(8)
Pelopidas and Marcellus.
(9)
Aristides and Cato the Elder.
(10) (11)
Philopoemen and Flamininus. Pyrrhus and Caius Marius.
(12)
Lysander and Sulla.
(13)
Cimon and LucuUus.
(14) Nicias
and Crassus.
(Jo) Sertorius
and Eumenes.
(17)
and Pompey. Alexander and Julius Caesar.
(18)
Phocion and Cato the Younger.
(19)
Agis and Cleomenes, and Tiberius and Caius Gracchus.
(16) Agesilaiis
(20)
(21) (22)
Demosthenes and Cicero. Demetrius and Antony. Dion and Brutus.
(23) Artaxerxes. (24) Aratus. (25)
Galba.
(26)
Otho.
THEMISTOCLES
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THEMISTOCLES,
xxi. 4-xxii. 2
own exile and condemnation. Then he composed the song beginning "O Muse, grant that this song Be famed throughout all Hellas, As it is meet and just." after the latter's
:
—
It is said that Timocreon was sent into exile on a charge of Medising, and that Themistocles concurred in the vote of condemnation. Accordingly, when Themistocles also was accused of Medising, Timocreon composed these lines upon him :
—
"Not Timocreon
alone, then, made compacts with the Medes, But there are other wretches too ; not I alone am brushless.
There are other foxes too." XXII. And at last, when even his fellow-citizens were led by their jealousy of his greatness to welcome such slanders against him, he was forced to allude to his own achievements when he addressed the Assembly, till he became tiresome thereby, and he once said to the malcontents " Why are ye vexed " that the same men should often benefit you ? :
He offended the multitude also by building the temple of Artemis, whom he surnamed Aristoboule, or Best Counsellor, intimating thus that it was he who had given the best counsel to the city and to the Hellenes. This temple he established near his house in Melit6, where now the public officers cast out the bodies of those who have been put to death, and carry forth the garments and the nooses of those who have dispatched themselves by hanging. A portrait-statue of Themistocles stood in this 61
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