[36] Frag., 102.
[37] Griechische Geschichte, ii., 112-3 (3rd ed.).
[38] Aristophanes, Vesp., 1176.
[39] Herod., VII., 204; IX., 64.
[40] Agam., 750-71.
[41] Ib., 311.
[42] Ol., XIII., 17 (Donaldson).
[43] ‘Thou shalt not take that which is mine, and may I do to others as I would that they should do to me’ (Plato, Legg., 913, A. Jowett’s Transl., vol. V., p. 483). Isocrates makes a king addressing his governors say: ‘You should be to others what you think I should be to you’ (Nicocles, 49). And again: ‘Do not to others what it makes you angry to suffer yourselves’ (Ibid., 61). A similar observation is attributed to Thales, doubtless by an anachronism (Diogenes Laertius, I., i., 36).
[44] We gladly avail ourselves of the masterly translation given by Prof. Jebb. The whole of this splendid passage will be found in his Attic Orators, vol. II., pp. 78-79.
[45] Symposium, 211, C; Jowett’s Transl., vol. II.