[275] Xenophon, Economicus, VII.-IX.
[276] Isæus de Pyrrhi Her., § 14.
[277] Antig. 905-13. These verses are probably interpolated, but the interpolation was as early as Aristotle. The same views are placed by Herodotus in the mouth of the wife of Intarphernes (3. 119). See Donaldson, Woman, pp. 53, 54 and note.
[278] "The Position of Women in History"; Essay in the volume The Position of Woman, Actual and Ideal, p. 37.
[279] Medea.
[280] Theodota, Xen. 'Mem.', III. II. Socrates conversed with Theodota on art and discussed with her how she could best find true friends.
[281] Symposium.
[282] Pericles, 24. Thargalia used her influence over the Greeks to win them over to the cause of the King of Persia.
[283] Timandra, Plut., Alcib., c. 39.
[284] Geoffrey Mortimer (W.M. Gallichan), Chapters on Human Love, p. 152.