[1123] Plato, Leges, 865 D ff.

[1124] Cf. Demosth., in Aristocr., pp. 634 and 643.

[1125] The word technically used of this withdrawal without formal sentence of banishment was ἀπενιαυτεῖν, or simply ἐξιέναι (cf. ὑπεξελθεῖν τῷ παθόντι in the above passage of Plato), or, as again in the same passage, ἀποξενοῦσθαι; whereas legal banishment was denoted by φεύγειν.

[1126] Plato, Leges, 872 D ff.

[1127] In early Greek, as witness the first line of the Iliad, the use of μῆνις, was less restricted than in later times; but the word, μήνιμα even in Homer occurs only, I think, in the phrase μήνιμα θεῶν. See below, p. [449].

[1128] Plato, Phaedrus, § 49, p. 244 D.

[1129] Cf. especially Eur. Or. 281–2, as pointed out by Bekker in his note on Plato, Phaedrus, l.c.

[1130] Aesch. Choeph. 293.

[1131] Plato, Leges, 869 A (Bekker’s text); cf. also 869 E.

[1132] See Aesch. Eum. 101 and 317 ff.; cf. Eur. Or. 583.