[1132]. Cic. Tusc. Quæst. i. 49.

[1133]. Aristot. Polit. ii. 9. Xenoph. Hellen. vi. v. 27. It should be remarked, however, that on a future occasion, when Sparta was besieged by King Pyrrhus, the female disciples of Lycurgus behaved with more fortitude and energy; for when it was debated in the senate whether they should not convey their wives and children to Crete, and then, deriving courage from despair, determine to conquer or perish on the spot, Archidamia, daughter of the king, entered their assembly sword in hand, opposed their resolution, saying, it behoved the women of Sparta to live and die with their husbands. The female population was, in consequence, suffered to remain; and by digging with the men in the trenches, sharpening the arms, and attending on the wounded, so strongly excited the courage of the Spartans, that they at length succeeded in repulsing the Macedonians from their city. Cf. Plut. Pyrrh. § 27.—Polyæn. Stratagem. vii. 49.

[1134]. Plut. de Mulier. Virtut. t. ii. p. 195. Polyæn. Stratagem. viii. 33.

[1135]. Thucyd. ii. 4.

[1136]. Plut. de Mulier. Virtut. t. ii. p. 192.

[1137]. Cleomen. § 38. I have here made use of the translation of Langhorne, because it would be no easy matter to furnish a better.

[1138]. Πέπλος.

[1139]. Plut. Agis §§ 17. 18. Moore in his Lalla Rookh has expressed the same idea.

Fly to the desert, fly with me,

Our Arab tents are rude for thee;