[263] Ctes., §§ 119-121.
[264] Aesch., de Leg., § 153.
[265] E.g., de Leg., § 147. His esteem for his mother is expressed, ibid., § 148.
[266] de Leg., § 152.
[267] p. 178.
[268] Ctes., § 218.
[269] Cf. the frequent use of δεινός and δεινῶς—δεινὴ ἀπαιδευσία, ἀναισχυντία; δεινῶς σχετλιάζειν, ἀσχημονεῖν, ἀγνοεῖν, etc., and compounds such as ὑπεραγανακτῶ, ὑπεραισχύνομαι.
[270] E.g. the fine passage about Thebes, infra, p. [186].
[271] The speech of Lysias against Eratosthenes, for instance, contains many complicated sentences which are unnecessarily obscure.
[272] ὁρώντων φρονούντων βλεπόντων ὑμῶν. Ctes., § 94.