[153] Dion., de Isaeo, ch. 1.
[154] Jebb, vol. ii. p. 265.
[155] de Isaeo, ch. 1.
[156] He is by far the most important; in some cases we can supplement him from Demosthenes, but other authorities are negligible.
[157] §§ 1-11.
[158] § 12. I have translated this section, though not relevant to the matter under discussion, because it gives a good indication of Athenian feeling on the subject of the torture of slaves.
[159] Jebb, Attic Orators, vol. ii. p. 277³.
[160] Cleisthenes (Herod., vi. 129), in a moment of extreme excitement, remarked to Hippoclides ἀπωρχήσαο τὸν γάμον—‘You have danced away your chances of marriage.’
[161] Cf., too, the use of ὑπωπτιάζω in the New Testament.
[162] E.g. γρῦξαι.